J
jerberson12
mucis procedure
OK guys i wanna know if what type of mix do you want but please read the information on each mix first.
NEW YORK Style
It is perhaps the easiest to identify it features a lot of compression, which makes the mix very punchy and aggressive. In many cases, the compressed instruments (mostly rythm section) are even recompressed several times along the way. It seems that every newyork engineer that i interviewed (even the transplanted ones) had virtually the same trick. Send the drums (sometimes with the bass) into a couple of busses, send that through some compressor, squeeze to taste, then add back a judicious amount of this compressed rythm section to the mix through a couple faders. This can be enhanced even further by boosting the high and low frequencies (lots of boost in most cases) to the compressed signal as well. For an example of this, listen to any of the mixes that Ed Stasium (proud practitioner of this method) has done, such as the Mick Jagger solo album, She's the Boss or anything by the Smithereens or Living Color.
LA Style
The LA sound is a somewhat more natural sound; it is compressed, but to a less obvious degree than the New York style. There's a lot less effects layering than the london style. The LA style has always tried to capture a musical event and augment it a little, rather than recreate it. Some good examples would be any of the Doobie Brothers or Van Halen hits of the 70's and 80's.
London Style
The london sound is a highly layered musical event that borrows some from the New York style in that it's somewhat compressed, but deals with multitple effects layers. This style makes extensive use of whatbis known as perpective, which puts each instrument into its own distinct sonic environment. Although musical arrangement is important to any good mix, its even more a distinctive characteristic of a london mix. What this mean is that many parts appears at different times during mix, some for effects, some to change the dynamic of the song. Each new part will be in its own environment and as a result will have a different perpective. A perfect example of this would be Yes' Owners of a lonely hearts, or just about anything done by Trevor Horn, such as Seal or Grace Jones
Custom Style
Hell those mixes, i want my own!
Reference
The Mixing Engineer's HandBook by Bobby Owsinski
NEW YORK Style
It is perhaps the easiest to identify it features a lot of compression, which makes the mix very punchy and aggressive. In many cases, the compressed instruments (mostly rythm section) are even recompressed several times along the way. It seems that every newyork engineer that i interviewed (even the transplanted ones) had virtually the same trick. Send the drums (sometimes with the bass) into a couple of busses, send that through some compressor, squeeze to taste, then add back a judicious amount of this compressed rythm section to the mix through a couple faders. This can be enhanced even further by boosting the high and low frequencies (lots of boost in most cases) to the compressed signal as well. For an example of this, listen to any of the mixes that Ed Stasium (proud practitioner of this method) has done, such as the Mick Jagger solo album, She's the Boss or anything by the Smithereens or Living Color.
LA Style
The LA sound is a somewhat more natural sound; it is compressed, but to a less obvious degree than the New York style. There's a lot less effects layering than the london style. The LA style has always tried to capture a musical event and augment it a little, rather than recreate it. Some good examples would be any of the Doobie Brothers or Van Halen hits of the 70's and 80's.
London Style
The london sound is a highly layered musical event that borrows some from the New York style in that it's somewhat compressed, but deals with multitple effects layers. This style makes extensive use of whatbis known as perpective, which puts each instrument into its own distinct sonic environment. Although musical arrangement is important to any good mix, its even more a distinctive characteristic of a london mix. What this mean is that many parts appears at different times during mix, some for effects, some to change the dynamic of the song. Each new part will be in its own environment and as a result will have a different perpective. A perfect example of this would be Yes' Owners of a lonely hearts, or just about anything done by Trevor Horn, such as Seal or Grace Jones
Custom Style
Hell those mixes, i want my own!
Reference
The Mixing Engineer's HandBook by Bobby Owsinski