Jason Molinari said:
I"m now spending time finding what tools i need to use and how to use them.
Ah HA! Don't know how I missed that - THAT is the point, entirely.
You NEED to know what the tools do. You NEED to how a particular mix will react to particular settings from particular tools.
You need to listen to the mix and listen to what it's asking for. I'll probably sound like a broken record, but this is why it's generally not a great idea to master your own mixes - If you're not hearing what it's asking for in the mixing stage, another stage isn't going to help anything.
But it's absolutely true - There are NO presets. There are NO starting points. The meal is already cooked - You're just deciding on the best garnish at this point - This is the finishing touch - It's the spice, not the main course.
The point is to listen to the mix and *know* what it needs and what will get it there. Every mix will be different. They might need similar variations - Several mixes from the same project *might* benefit from similar starting points, but no one can tell you what those starting points are.
For example - I have 3 "key" compressors here - It's almost guaranteed that audio will pass through one (or more) of them. WHICH one isn't decided until I'm listening to the mix. Then, it isn't time for experimentation - It's time for
knowing which one(s) will be used and what settings will get me into the tweaking stage. Experimenting is fine for learning - But experiment on things that you're not working on. Otherwise, you'll spend all of your time getting nowhere and second-guessing what you've done already.
There's nothing wrong with subjective questions either - But give 5 M.E.'s a project to work on and give them all the same chain to work with and you're almost guranteed to get 5 different results.
And that's not to say that presets are entirely bad - But a preset has to simply fit the need. If you've got a tune that's a little "tubby" in the 300Hz range and a preset that makes a bit of a cut in the 300Hz range, then that's a valid starting point. But (A) only YOU know if the mix is a little tubby in the 300Hz range and (B) if the preset cuts at 250Hz instead, it's pretty worthless to you as a starting point.
To revisit the start -
Jason Molinari said:
I"m now spending time finding what tools i need to use and how to use them.
That should've been the priority before anything else anyway.