
BroKen_H
Re-member
Artifacts show up in SC that don't when I play in Reason. "There is" nothing left to do "or" say. That my soul knows quite "well" among others...

1) You didn't have a close mic on the hi-hat?Okay. Added a 6k shelf on the drums (minus kick) to bring forward the hats, ride and cymbals. Bonus: got the snare louder in the process and some nice air. Kicked the snare back a bit (it got a bit too loud).
Pushed the guitars 2dB to get them back...don't know where they went to.
Tightened the 2nd to last praise. Makes it glitchy. Have to balance the first note tight and the last note tight and the slide between loose enough so it doesn't walk the glissando. That may take some work...especially as it doesn't always do it the same (seems to vary depending on the starting point. $200 is starting to sound cheap.not really.
Actually, I didn't get a clean vocal tack, as there where some double tracked vocals that were left in here and there. You are probably hearing the doubles.Crazy Luke did a great job, but I must say that I hear some phasing, like the latency that having Melodyne still active on a track and the bounced version of it playing at the same time. Maybe I am also crazy. But I hear it...
Sounds better with the tuned vocals. Watch that you don't pitch correct the phrase too hard and lose the vibrato as some of the notes are "too perfect" sounding. The cymbals are a little loud - you notice the "splash" rings a bit - which may be SC but I suspect they are just too loud. The rest sounds good. The quality of the mix has improved over time so you are getting better at this mixing thing. I would recommend you buy some kind of tuning software for the future as vocals are usually the thing the average person listens to the most and if they fail no amount of your excellent keyboard skills will matter.
Another trick that seems to help some singers is to use Melodyne to make a scratch guide vocal track. Tune a vocal track and sing with it. Helps to get your pitch dead on when tracking.
I heard Stryper used separate keyboard notes sent to each of their monitors to improve their pitch when performing live. Same kinda thing.