A
AntiqueRoman
New member
Don't want to moan too much so I'll keep it short and I hate the idea of self promoting lol
https://www.gearslutz.com/board/songwriting/905429-can-i-get-honest-opinion-my-music.html
That was a post I made a long time ago in regards to an album I paid to get mixed by a local "mixer/producer" whom taught me the meaning of getting your money's worth among other things such as his claims of him being a superior guitarist than me and everyone in the area (not even in context, just a random cut down), and how he is (wasn't) mixing for Godsmack which was to better explain to me why it took him 10 months to mix a 17 song album poorly. In all honesty, I truly just believe he wasn't accustomed to the type of music I make, e.g. a reggae producer would have a different and possibly worse idea in approaching a metal project than a veteran in that genre. That's not to say that can't or hasn't happened, I'm just going off Albini's idea in his essay "Problem with Music".
Fast forward a year later after a mopey depression due to people being too fatigued after just a single song (of my life's work up to that point), supposedly due to all the improper effects creating a dissonance, the subdued focal points of the song and the eq mush, I decided to take matters into my own hands.
Side note: I'm extremely sorry if this just seems to be negative I'm just trying to paint the picture of why I am trying to become an engineer/producer to better help my projects, lower my overhead, and possibly help other people in my area whom have also had these things happen to them.
After obsessing and falling into a very strange fascination with Albini and his methodology I found myself subscribing to a lot of the ideas he presented such as catering to a band's sound as opposed to blindly applying "Pensado's Magic Reverb Settings for Radio Ready Pop Vocals" (very popular with the previously mentioned "producer") or even the idea of "engineer" over "producer". I swung into action and researched the best equipment for my money, the proper techniques (lots of Owsinski and various Vig and Albini interviews) and rented out a rehearsal studio for my next studio outing.
The following are songs that to the best of my knowledge are hopefully an improvement from the other mixes done by some one else (see: theantiqueromans.bandcamp.com)
This is the second song to date that I have mixed called Poison The Water:
https://soundcloud.com/the-antique-romans/poison-the-water
The first song I mixed which I know has a bit too much going on in the end (remixing soon) is Noir I: Lehigh Acres:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UdsvznmVt9A
All drums are live (the first song only has one fake instrument and it is the electronic drums at the end) and I'm more than happy to dive into whatever process anyone would like to discuss so that whatever ideas are presented I can incorporate into my next mixes for this album.
I know that these aren't exactly radio friendly singles but my aim for these mixes were to really emphasize clarity and professionalism with the mixes. I want them to sound good for what they are trying to accomplish even though "good" means something COMPLETELY different between Steely Dan, Britney Spears or The Jesus Lizard.
Thank you so much for your time! Any feedback is REALLY REALLY appreciated even if it were to refer to a resource you think could help me in the future
- Chris
TL
R - Check out my jams and please leave some feedback
https://www.gearslutz.com/board/songwriting/905429-can-i-get-honest-opinion-my-music.html
That was a post I made a long time ago in regards to an album I paid to get mixed by a local "mixer/producer" whom taught me the meaning of getting your money's worth among other things such as his claims of him being a superior guitarist than me and everyone in the area (not even in context, just a random cut down), and how he is (wasn't) mixing for Godsmack which was to better explain to me why it took him 10 months to mix a 17 song album poorly. In all honesty, I truly just believe he wasn't accustomed to the type of music I make, e.g. a reggae producer would have a different and possibly worse idea in approaching a metal project than a veteran in that genre. That's not to say that can't or hasn't happened, I'm just going off Albini's idea in his essay "Problem with Music".
Fast forward a year later after a mopey depression due to people being too fatigued after just a single song (of my life's work up to that point), supposedly due to all the improper effects creating a dissonance, the subdued focal points of the song and the eq mush, I decided to take matters into my own hands.
Side note: I'm extremely sorry if this just seems to be negative I'm just trying to paint the picture of why I am trying to become an engineer/producer to better help my projects, lower my overhead, and possibly help other people in my area whom have also had these things happen to them.
After obsessing and falling into a very strange fascination with Albini and his methodology I found myself subscribing to a lot of the ideas he presented such as catering to a band's sound as opposed to blindly applying "Pensado's Magic Reverb Settings for Radio Ready Pop Vocals" (very popular with the previously mentioned "producer") or even the idea of "engineer" over "producer". I swung into action and researched the best equipment for my money, the proper techniques (lots of Owsinski and various Vig and Albini interviews) and rented out a rehearsal studio for my next studio outing.
The following are songs that to the best of my knowledge are hopefully an improvement from the other mixes done by some one else (see: theantiqueromans.bandcamp.com)
This is the second song to date that I have mixed called Poison The Water:
https://soundcloud.com/the-antique-romans/poison-the-water
The first song I mixed which I know has a bit too much going on in the end (remixing soon) is Noir I: Lehigh Acres:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UdsvznmVt9A
All drums are live (the first song only has one fake instrument and it is the electronic drums at the end) and I'm more than happy to dive into whatever process anyone would like to discuss so that whatever ideas are presented I can incorporate into my next mixes for this album.
I know that these aren't exactly radio friendly singles but my aim for these mixes were to really emphasize clarity and professionalism with the mixes. I want them to sound good for what they are trying to accomplish even though "good" means something COMPLETELY different between Steely Dan, Britney Spears or The Jesus Lizard.
Thank you so much for your time! Any feedback is REALLY REALLY appreciated even if it were to refer to a resource you think could help me in the future
- Chris
TL
