H
HapiCmpur
New member
I'm recording and mixing a ballad. The song starts off soft and quiet, just a voice and a piano. By the end it's got drums, harmonies, faux strings, and, of course, bucketloads of passion. Well, that's the idea, anyway. I've got some questions about how one deals with passion in the studio. And I'm not talking about nailing your girlfriend on the console here guys; I'm talking about working with songs that start out softly but that gradually ramp up to full blown tear-your-heart-out emotion by the end.
In regard to tracking, for instance, do engineers try to help performers feel the changing mood of the song by slowly increasing the volume of the headphone mix?
And in regard to mixing, is there a rule of thumb or a general guidline of some kind about the difference in volume between the beginning and the ending of the song? Is there a "golden ratio," for instance, that engineers have discovered really hits the mark?
And if there is such a ratio, is that the kind of thing that would added during mixing, mastering, or both?
Please don't limit responses to just these questions. I'm interested in anything anyone has to say about working with songs that start out quiet but have big finishes.
In regard to tracking, for instance, do engineers try to help performers feel the changing mood of the song by slowly increasing the volume of the headphone mix?
And in regard to mixing, is there a rule of thumb or a general guidline of some kind about the difference in volume between the beginning and the ending of the song? Is there a "golden ratio," for instance, that engineers have discovered really hits the mark?
And if there is such a ratio, is that the kind of thing that would added during mixing, mastering, or both?
Please don't limit responses to just these questions. I'm interested in anything anyone has to say about working with songs that start out quiet but have big finishes.