M
mattkw80
New member
Hey Everybody,
I am still a newbie when it comes to mixing, but I thought I would share my findings on a mistake I made.
Here are the different setups I do my critical listening through :
1. Edirol (Roland) MD-10D Digital Reference Monitors
2. B&W LM Speakers ($800 a piece, connected to a $2500 stereo receiver)
3. In my car (factory speakers)
4. On my television (with the CD playing out of my DVD player)
5. On a cheap boom box (Panasonic $40)
6. Through Cheap computer speakers
and
7. Through my uncle's B&W system ($5000 per speaker)
Anyway, my reference monitor's are obviously my best bet, and have served me well.
Here's where my mistake happened :
A friend and I were mixing his songs, and after an hour, had a mix on a song that we thought sounded great. After EQ, Compression, changing track volumes etc. We really thought we had done a nice job.
So... we burned a disk and took it out to the car, and to the televsion, and to the boom box, etc. We were shocked to find out that our mix sound HORRIBLE. Simply awful. EQ was wrong, volumes were wrong, it sounded as though we didn't mix it at all.
I later discovered, that the entire time, I had turned my reference monitors off, and was indeed mixing through the Stereo System / B&W Lm's.
I guess the B&W's must do so much "magic" to the sound signal that our mix sounded really good there, but HORRIBLE on everything else.
Anybody else have a story where they mixed through something other than reference monitors, and it didn't turn out well ?
I am still a newbie when it comes to mixing, but I thought I would share my findings on a mistake I made.
Here are the different setups I do my critical listening through :
1. Edirol (Roland) MD-10D Digital Reference Monitors
2. B&W LM Speakers ($800 a piece, connected to a $2500 stereo receiver)
3. In my car (factory speakers)
4. On my television (with the CD playing out of my DVD player)
5. On a cheap boom box (Panasonic $40)
6. Through Cheap computer speakers
and
7. Through my uncle's B&W system ($5000 per speaker)
Anyway, my reference monitor's are obviously my best bet, and have served me well.
Here's where my mistake happened :
A friend and I were mixing his songs, and after an hour, had a mix on a song that we thought sounded great. After EQ, Compression, changing track volumes etc. We really thought we had done a nice job.
So... we burned a disk and took it out to the car, and to the televsion, and to the boom box, etc. We were shocked to find out that our mix sound HORRIBLE. Simply awful. EQ was wrong, volumes were wrong, it sounded as though we didn't mix it at all.
I later discovered, that the entire time, I had turned my reference monitors off, and was indeed mixing through the Stereo System / B&W Lm's.
I guess the B&W's must do so much "magic" to the sound signal that our mix sounded really good there, but HORRIBLE on everything else.
Anybody else have a story where they mixed through something other than reference monitors, and it didn't turn out well ?