C
Cloneboy Studio
.
Since I've offered some criticism I'll back it up with some advice:
This is how I approach a mixdown--first off, I'm planning for my *MASTER* before I ever press record. I chart out the number of anticipated tracks I'm going to be recording based on the song/instrumentation and how I'm going to be miking elements. Once I have a track count I calculate the volume level I need to be recording at; the reason I do this is so whether I have 16, 24 or 128 tracks my mixdown will comfortably hit a -6db volume level.
My formula: 24 tracks = record at -12db, and for every additional 24 tracks reduce volume by 3db. (So 48 tracks at -15db each).
This is a quick and dirty rule that takes into account compression, the fact that some elements may be *far* down in the mix and so forth. It is a good rule of thumb that will get you close to the goal of a -6db summed mixdown.
After everything is recorded I will mix with the goal in mind that -6db is the absolute peak the recording can get to, allowing for the occasional spike that may hit at -4db or so.
UNDER NO CIRCUMSTANCES LET ANYTHING EVEN COME CLOSE TO CLIPPING IN YOUR MIXDOWN!
Lately I've been putting a few light effects on my mixdowns, typically Analog Channel 1 and 2, to simulate a mixdown to 2" tape. Every once in a while (and for heavier music styles) I may feel that the Bombfactory Slightly Rude Compressor used very, very lightly benefits a track on mixdown.
Once you have the mixdown set the master should be easy if you did your job right and didn't clip anything, and the mix already sounds great. Slap on some light compression, maybe a little bit of EQ, maybe tighten the extreme low end with a filter, slam the levels a bit with some peak limiting like the Oxford Inflator (what I use) and call it a day.
There are rules (like digital clipping = bad), but they are easy to follow and even a noob with halfway decent ears can hear that it's bad.
This is how I approach a mixdown--first off, I'm planning for my *MASTER* before I ever press record. I chart out the number of anticipated tracks I'm going to be recording based on the song/instrumentation and how I'm going to be miking elements. Once I have a track count I calculate the volume level I need to be recording at; the reason I do this is so whether I have 16, 24 or 128 tracks my mixdown will comfortably hit a -6db volume level.
My formula: 24 tracks = record at -12db, and for every additional 24 tracks reduce volume by 3db. (So 48 tracks at -15db each).
This is a quick and dirty rule that takes into account compression, the fact that some elements may be *far* down in the mix and so forth. It is a good rule of thumb that will get you close to the goal of a -6db summed mixdown.
After everything is recorded I will mix with the goal in mind that -6db is the absolute peak the recording can get to, allowing for the occasional spike that may hit at -4db or so.
UNDER NO CIRCUMSTANCES LET ANYTHING EVEN COME CLOSE TO CLIPPING IN YOUR MIXDOWN!
Lately I've been putting a few light effects on my mixdowns, typically Analog Channel 1 and 2, to simulate a mixdown to 2" tape. Every once in a while (and for heavier music styles) I may feel that the Bombfactory Slightly Rude Compressor used very, very lightly benefits a track on mixdown.
Once you have the mixdown set the master should be easy if you did your job right and didn't clip anything, and the mix already sounds great. Slap on some light compression, maybe a little bit of EQ, maybe tighten the extreme low end with a filter, slam the levels a bit with some peak limiting like the Oxford Inflator (what I use) and call it a day.
There are rules (like digital clipping = bad), but they are easy to follow and even a noob with halfway decent ears can hear that it's bad.