
crawdad
Dammit, Jim, Shut Up!
Middleman--while all you surmise may indeed be true, I think that frequency conflict is the prime suspect. If you've ever seen a chart of frequency response for common instruments, you know that there is a lot of overlap between things like guitars, pianos and bass, not to mention synths and other acoustic instruments. When the same frequencies build up in certain areas, the ear doesn't know what to focus on--its a sort of trainwreck.
The answer is partly getting the sound right at the source and using the right mic placement for the situation. That helps. Still, there are going to be areas where two guitars and a piano are fighting for the same space--thus making muddy and murky sound. If you doubt this--just pull all the midrange stuff and hear the bass and drums alone. All the sudden you hear timbres in the bass and drums that you didn't know were there!
Thats where EQ comes in--and thats why I have been asking all these crazy questions! EQ can shape each sound so that it has its own spot in the mix without walking all over everything else.
My other rule of thumb is the old cliche that less is more. Its far easier to mix a bass, drums, guitar, piano and vocal mix than it is to mix something with that and 8 more parts on top. The more there is, the less separation there tends to be.
I notice it most in the 100-300htz range--all that low mid stuff. I think that is something that every engineer deals with--no matter how good the mics and pres are--at least of you are recording bands that lay down lots of tracks.
Just some thoughts.
The answer is partly getting the sound right at the source and using the right mic placement for the situation. That helps. Still, there are going to be areas where two guitars and a piano are fighting for the same space--thus making muddy and murky sound. If you doubt this--just pull all the midrange stuff and hear the bass and drums alone. All the sudden you hear timbres in the bass and drums that you didn't know were there!
Thats where EQ comes in--and thats why I have been asking all these crazy questions! EQ can shape each sound so that it has its own spot in the mix without walking all over everything else.
My other rule of thumb is the old cliche that less is more. Its far easier to mix a bass, drums, guitar, piano and vocal mix than it is to mix something with that and 8 more parts on top. The more there is, the less separation there tends to be.
I notice it most in the 100-300htz range--all that low mid stuff. I think that is something that every engineer deals with--no matter how good the mics and pres are--at least of you are recording bands that lay down lots of tracks.
Just some thoughts.