R
RFR
Well-known member
One of my bandmates and I had a conversation. He recently got into digital daw recording. Been at it for about a year and has had extensive analog experience.
He says and I quote. “The more I learn the worse my mixes get. In the old days it was so easy.”
I thought about this for a while....... hmm. The same is true for me.
Back in the day you twiddled some knobs till it sounded good. And it did. Mixes I did 20 some years ago STILL sound good and new Daw mixes sound like crap.
One thing might be a possibility and ‘produce like a pro’ had a recent episode on this topic.....compression.
In the old days there was some form of compression on every stage of the process via tape, console, outboard etc.
Warren from produce like a pro seems to agree. He talks about needing to apply compression on every channel rather than at your master buss.
The tricky thing for me however is getting enough to be effective while retaining subtlety
What you all think?
He says and I quote. “The more I learn the worse my mixes get. In the old days it was so easy.”
I thought about this for a while....... hmm. The same is true for me.
Back in the day you twiddled some knobs till it sounded good. And it did. Mixes I did 20 some years ago STILL sound good and new Daw mixes sound like crap.
One thing might be a possibility and ‘produce like a pro’ had a recent episode on this topic.....compression.
In the old days there was some form of compression on every stage of the process via tape, console, outboard etc.
Warren from produce like a pro seems to agree. He talks about needing to apply compression on every channel rather than at your master buss.
The tricky thing for me however is getting enough to be effective while retaining subtlety
What you all think?