EQ Magazine - February 2009 - (Page 42) MIX BUS THE SEVEN DEADLY SINS OF MIXING by Craig Anderton If you listen to a lot of mixes coming out of home and project studios, after a while you notice a definite dividing line between the people who know what they’re doing, and the people who commit one or more of the Seven Deadly Sins of Mixing. You don’t want to be a mixing sinner, do you? Of course not! So, check out these tips. 1. The disorienting room space. This comes from using too many reverbs: a silky plate on the voice, a big room on the snare, shorter delays on guitar . . . concert hall, or concert hell? Even if the listener can’t identify the problem, they’ll know that something doesn’t sound quite right. Solution: Choose one reverb as your main reverb that defines the characteristics of your imaginary “room.” Insert this in an aux bus. If you do use additional reverb on, say, voice, use this second reverb as a channel insert effect but don’t rely on it for all your vocal reverb; make up the difference by sending the vocal to the reverb aux bus to add in a bit of the common room reverb. The end result will sound much more realistic. 2. Failure to mute. All those little pops, snorks, hisses, and hums can destroy a mix’s transparency. Even a few glitches here and there add up when multiplied over several tracks. Solution: Automate mutes for when vocalists aren’t singing, during the spaces between lead guitar solos, and the like. Automating mutes independently of fader-style level Fig. 1. Reducing some lower midrange energy in one or more tracks (in this case, using SSL’s X-EQ equalizer) can help toward creating a less muddy, more defined low end. that contribute the most lower midrange energy. Or, try the famous “smile” curve that accentuates lows and highs, which by definition causes the midrange to be less prominent. 6. Dynamics control issues. We’ve already mentioned why you don’t want to compress the entire mix, but pay attention to how individual tracks are compressed as well. Generally, a miked bass amp track needs a lot of compression to make up for variations in amp/cabinet frequency response; compression smoothes out those anomalies. You also want vocals to stand out in the mix and sound intimate, so they’re good candidates for compression as well. Solution: Be careful not to apply too much compression, but too little compression can be a problem, too. Try increasing the compression (i.e., lower threshold and/or higher ratio) until you can “hear” the effect, then back off until you don’t hear the compression any more. The optimum position is often within these two extremes: enough to make a difference, but not enough to be heard as an “effect.” 7. Mixing in an acoustically untreated room. If you’re not getting an accurate read on your sound, then you can’t mix it properly. And it won’t sound right on other systems, either. Solution: Even a little treatment, like bass traps, “clouds” that sit above the mix position, and placing near-field speakers properly so you’re hearing primarily their direct sound rather than any reflected sound can help. Also consider using really good headphones as a reality check. automation lets you use each for what it does best. 3. “Pre-mastering” a mix. You want your mix to “pop” a little more, so you throw a limiter into your stereo bus, along with some EQ, a highfrequency exciter, a stereo widener, and maybe even more . . . thus guaranteeing your mastering engineer can’t do the best possible job with a fantastic set of mastering processors. Solution: Unless you really know what you’re doing, resist the temptation to “master” your mix before it goes to the mastering engineer. If you want to listen with processors inserted to get an idea of what the mix will sound like when compressed, go ahead—but hit the bypass switch before you mix down to stereo (or surround, if that’s your thing). 4. Not giving the lead instrument enough attention. This tends to be more of a problem with those who mix their own music, because they fall in love with their parts and want them all to be heard. But the listener is going to focus on the lead part, and pay attention to the rest of the tracks mostly in the context of supporting the lead. Solution: Take a cue from your listeners. 5. Too much mud. A lot of instruments have energy in the lower midrange, which tends to build up during mixdown. As a result, the lows and high seem less prominent, and the mix sounds muddy. Solution: Try a gentle, relatively low bandwidth cut of a dB or two around 300–500Hz on those instruments 42 EQ FEBRUARY 2009 www.eqmag.com http://www.eqmag.com
Table of Contents Feed for the Digital Edition of EQ Magazine - February 2009 EQ Magazine - February 2009 Contents Talk Box Sounding Board Dave Cooley Low vs. Diamond Hank Williams III Travis Franz Ferdinand Guitar Trax Bass Management Key Issues Drum Heads Vocal Cords Mix Bus Cheat Sheet Apple Logic Pro 8 Cakewalk Sonar Near-Field Monitor Roundup Gadgets &Goodies Sounds Room with a Vu EQ Magazine - February 2009 EQ Magazine - February 2009 - EQ Magazine - February 2009 (Page Cover1) EQ Magazine - February 2009 - EQ Magazine - February 2009 (Page Cover2) EQ Magazine - February 2009 - EQ Magazine - February 2009 (Page 1) EQ Magazine - February 2009 - Contents (Page 2) EQ Magazine - February 2009 - Contents (Page 3) EQ Magazine - February 2009 - Talk Box (Page 4) EQ Magazine - February 2009 - Talk Box (Page Blowin1) EQ Magazine - February 2009 - Talk Box (Page Blowin2) EQ Magazine - February 2009 - Talk Box (Page 5) EQ Magazine - February 2009 - Sounding Board (Page 6) EQ Magazine - February 2009 - Sounding Board (Page 7) EQ Magazine - February 2009 - Dave Cooley (Page 8) EQ Magazine - February 2009 - Dave Cooley (Page 9) EQ Magazine - February 2009 - Low vs. Diamond (Page 10) EQ Magazine - February 2009 - Low vs. Diamond (Page 11) EQ Magazine - February 2009 - Hank Williams III (Page 12) EQ Magazine - February 2009 - Hank Williams III (Page 13) EQ Magazine - February 2009 - Hank Williams III (Page 14) EQ Magazine - February 2009 - Hank Williams III (Page 15) EQ Magazine - February 2009 - Travis (Page 16) EQ Magazine - February 2009 - Travis (Page 17) EQ Magazine - February 2009 - Travis (Page 18) EQ Magazine - February 2009 - Travis (Page 19) EQ Magazine - February 2009 - Franz Ferdinand (Page 20) EQ Magazine - February 2009 - Franz Ferdinand (Page 21) EQ Magazine - February 2009 - Franz Ferdinand (Page 22) EQ Magazine - February 2009 - Franz Ferdinand (Page 23) EQ Magazine - February 2009 - Franz Ferdinand (Page 24) EQ Magazine - February 2009 - Franz Ferdinand (Page 25) EQ Magazine - February 2009 - Franz Ferdinand (Page 26) EQ Magazine - February 2009 - Franz Ferdinand (Page 27) EQ Magazine - February 2009 - Franz Ferdinand (Page 28) EQ Magazine - February 2009 - Franz Ferdinand (Page 29) EQ Magazine - February 2009 - Guitar Trax (Page 30) EQ Magazine - February 2009 - Guitar Trax (Page 31) EQ Magazine - February 2009 - Bass Management (Page 32) EQ Magazine - February 2009 - Bass Management (Page 33) EQ Magazine - February 2009 - Key Issues (Page 34) EQ Magazine - February 2009 - Key Issues (Page 35) EQ Magazine - February 2009 - Drum Heads (Page 36) EQ Magazine - February 2009 - Drum Heads (Page 37) EQ Magazine - February 2009 - Vocal Cords (Page 38) EQ Magazine - February 2009 - Vocal Cords (Page 39) EQ Magazine - February 2009 - Vocal Cords (Page 40) EQ Magazine - February 2009 - Vocal Cords (Page 41) EQ Magazine - February 2009 - Mix Bus (Page 42) EQ Magazine - February 2009 - Mix Bus (Page 43) EQ Magazine - February 2009 - Cheat Sheet (Page 44) EQ Magazine - February 2009 - Cheat Sheet (Page 45) EQ Magazine - February 2009 - Apple Logic Pro 8 (Page 46) EQ Magazine - February 2009 - Apple Logic Pro 8 (Page 47) EQ Magazine - February 2009 - Cakewalk Sonar (Page 48) EQ Magazine - February 2009 - Cakewalk Sonar (Page 49) EQ Magazine - February 2009 - Near-Field Monitor Roundup (Page 50) EQ Magazine - February 2009 - Near-Field Monitor Roundup (Page 51) EQ Magazine - February 2009 - Near-Field Monitor Roundup (Page 52) EQ Magazine - February 2009 - Near-Field Monitor Roundup (Page 53) EQ Magazine - February 2009 - Near-Field Monitor Roundup (Page 54) EQ Magazine - February 2009 - Near-Field Monitor Roundup (Page 55) EQ Magazine - February 2009 - Near-Field Monitor Roundup (Page 56) EQ Magazine - February 2009 - Near-Field Monitor Roundup (Page 57) EQ Magazine - February 2009 - Gadgets &Goodies (Page 58) EQ Magazine - February 2009 - Gadgets &Goodies (Page 59) EQ Magazine - February 2009 - Sounds (Page 60) EQ Magazine - February 2009 - Sounds (Page 61) EQ Magazine - February 2009 - Sounds (Page 62) EQ Magazine - February 2009 - Sounds (Page 63) EQ Magazine - February 2009 - Sounds (Page 64) EQ Magazine - February 2009 - Sounds (Page 65) EQ Magazine - February 2009 - Sounds (Page 66) EQ Magazine - February 2009 - Sounds (Page 67) EQ Magazine - February 2009 - Sounds (Page 68) EQ Magazine - February 2009 - Sounds (Page 69) EQ Magazine - February 2009 - Sounds (Page 70) EQ Magazine - February 2009 - Sounds (Page 71) EQ Magazine - February 2009 - Room with a Vu (Page 72) EQ Magazine - February 2009 - Room with a Vu (Page Cover3) EQ Magazine - February 2009 - Room with a Vu (Page Cover4)
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