
Blue Bear Sound
New member
Dru.... Tex is right - that's compression, NOT normalizing.
Blue Bear Sound said:
Now for digital mixing, fader linearity translates into bit-usage
Yes...atomictoyz said:ooohhhh, does this mean truncation during a "bit sum" on the master buss?
Yes...Dab nabbit Im getting grey hair everywhere
Blue Bear Sound said:
The problem is in real life, a flute is NOT as loud as a snare, so you're throwing natural balances out the window by bring the flute track UP to peak at 0dbFS.
Bruce
Yeah.... that MIGHT do it!NYMorningstar said:I was recording a singer once who spilt some beer on my wife's new rug and she smacked him upside the head with the flute and I swear it was as loud as a snare!
I don't think to the same degree, unless you really overdo it. What I'm really talking about is tracking for natural balances as opposed to tracking to make sure everything is peaking at 0dbFS... it's more of a work methodology than a rule or even a guideline. And I don't even follow it all the time - it varys based on the song -- if it's a real upbeat type of song, I tend to track everything slightly hotter -- if it's a more ambient type of track with lots of air in the arrangement, I won't worry about peak levels so much. For me, I just find it makes it easier to mix depending on the song.I'm thinking that using compression has the same effect on the natural balances of instruments. Would you share some tips on how to keep these balances in line?
I never use compression that way, except on rhythm beds (bass/drums) to get a punchier feel -- that's more of an effect though.Does compressing groups of tracks together add or detract from this problem?
Yup, bass and drums, for "punch" -- according to Bobby Owsinski (Mixing Engineer's Handbook) - it's characteristic of New York-style mixes.Are there certain groups that compress well together?
I never worry about using compression to track "hotter" -- I generally only use it minimally during tracking, if at all!How do you judge the trade off in using compression to get your signal hotter vs. throwing off the balances?
The easiest way to go for natural balance is recording a group in one shot instead of multiple overdubs... you then get them to sound right acoustically, then it becomes a matter of isolation and mic placement -- but the natural balances get built right in.Do you ever use the musicians to judge the volumes in the mixes for artistic value or is the engineer the better artist in judging this balancing act?
Actually - you should read sonusman's "tips about mixing" post - it IS essentially a book and he packed a lot of great info in that post!Geez, I'm thinking you could write a book on this, hehe.