
The Seifer
Banned
This one time I farted into a condenser mic and looped it over and over and it sounded like wetteke's "music".
Blue Bear Sound said:Hmmm.... I'm not trying to pat myself on the back, but being as objective as I can, I still hear a world of difference between my mix and others, mostly in terms of air/space & overall sonic balance.
The Seifer said:This one time I farted into a condenser mic and looped it over and over and it sounded like wetteke's "music".
nessbass said:I have a question for Blue Bear.
Do you have any principles when it comes to layering reverbs, like one for the early reflections, then a longer and finally a very long reverb, or do you spread two similar sounding reverbs from different units left/right? Or do you just play around until it fits?
David
The way I approach a mix is to get all the track gelling together WITHOUT ANY effects. Then once they're ballparked, I listen them as a whole and try to picture the ambience that I think would be most appropriate.nessbass said:I have a question for Blue Bear.
Do you have any principles when it comes to layering reverbs, like one for the early reflections, then a longer and finally a very long reverb, or do you spread two similar sounding reverbs from different units left/right? Or do you just play around until it fits?
David
I think one of the best ways of doing that is getting the timing of reverbs in sync with the tempo of the song. I know on several of my units, they have a tempo tap button. Just tap the button with the temo of the song and the effect will blend better with the music.nessbass said:Thanks for your reply Bruce, although I'm not shure you answered my question...
I wasn't asking about your approach to mixing in general, but rather how you go about choosing the reverbs (plural) you want to use. See, I approach it in quite a similar fashion, but as of now, I've never successfully combined several different reverbs, it always sounds kind of odd to me. So my question should have been more like:
When adding two or more reverbs together, how do you avoid that they sound like several unfitting reverbs and achieve something that sounds like one single, but improved reverb.
David
AH - I see... the trick is that you don't put reverbs that don't fit together!nessbass said:When adding two or more reverbs together, how do you avoid that they sound like several unfitting reverbs and achieve something that sounds like one single, but improved reverb.
I did a lot of EQ cuts, not much boosting -- and yes, was mostly on the Mackie. The Mackie EQ is not as unusable as some might have you beleive - especially for cuts. The only major EQ'ing was on the lead gtr at the end and that was using Cubase...Dethska said:Blue Bear, you mentioned that you did a lot of EQ'ing to the mix. Do you use the EQ on your Mackie 8 bus, or do you use an outboard EQ?
For the snare I used the VST plug in Cubase, I used an RNC on the lead vocals and a dbx166xl (same comp as the 1066) on the kick. Again, the lead gtr at the end was spruced-up with a tube plug-in in Cubase, along with a healthy dose of limiiting... then in the mix it was smashed again to even it out with a dbx 166xl.... that's pretty much it.... very little comp was used.Dethska said:Also, I'm not sure if you mentioned this before or not, but what types of compressors/gating did you use on the different tracks?
Blue Bear Sound said:AH - I see... the trick is that you don't put reverbs that don't fit together!
The Seifer said:His mix wasn't the holy grail of mixes, and isn't any better/worse than the rest of them. They are all "good"....