STAT1STICK said:
I meant start with the basics. For example: If you have a pretty standard rock song, don't fill it up with a whole bunch of extra sounds/instruments that will more than likely not be heard or don't belong anyway. Start with what you think is needed. After you have what you need, go through and decide if any additional pieces would sound good if they were added. But, I do agree that you shouldn't fill up the song with tracks containing badly placed microphones or un-needed background ambience. Sorry if I wasn't clear before.
Yeah, I'll agree with all that.
I could probably stand to clarify myself a little bit too. Track count of course depends upon the nature of the material being produced and the end effect the producer is looking for. If you wanna play Phil Spector (unarmed, of course) or are building a Taj Mahal out of synths a la Tomita, or are sessioning with a world sound band like Poi Dog Pondering or David Byrne, your track count of course needs to be high.
But when I hear headbangers racking up 25 tracks for a four-piece garage band, that is a big red flag either that the mix is going in the wrong direction, that the engineer is using their DAW inefficiently, or that they are trying to make up for lack of quality with a saturation of quantity (which of course never works.)
You're right, it's good to learn how to handle a large number of tracks. The organizational skills and engineering skills that one picks up by being able to do so are fantastic. But then the old Taoist addage kicks in, "Learn everything there is to learn, then discard what you've learned." Most people think that's nonsense because they misinterpret what it means. In this case it means, "learn how to work with a large number of tracks, then to move to the next level, learn how to do without those tracks."
The skills on acquires in learning how to get a great mix out of several dozen tracks are invaluable. But when you can then learn to get the same quality or better mix by reducing the number of tracks to a dozen, then you have really moved to the next level of quality.
G.