Mixing as a bass player always keeps my guitar tracks lower in the mix, my mixes still suck but at least nobody notices my shitty guitar playing. WIN 🎉
@imcrazedandconfused7 ай бұрын
PRO tip: Program your drums! Double the WIN.
@martinschubert70316 ай бұрын
Have the drummer program the drum track... That's so much WIN, it's not funny 😅
@thatguywiththeguitar72036 ай бұрын
Fun story, as a guitar player, I find myself keeping the bass almost as loud (if not a bit louder) than the guitars in the mix... it makes the chugging parts sound fantastic imo...
@videogamecoverss6 ай бұрын
@@thatguywiththeguitar7203 I do that too, I let the bass fill up the sound for the guitars, which makes the guitars sound big when they really aren't
@thatguywiththeguitar72036 ай бұрын
@@videogamecoverss Yeah! It's almost like the guitars are mostly for texturing and the bass is for the low end... least that's my approach
@heitorbarreto87517 ай бұрын
Number 4 is so true, that it’s bizarre how I got better mixes by simply sleeping and waking up on the next day with a fresh mind. Awesome video, as always, Glenn.
@bryang92907 ай бұрын
lol right, mixer you and guitarist you need to be 2 different yous
@chaptermasterpedrokantor16237 ай бұрын
The golden rule I was taught doing FOH mixing was that if you were also musician, usually the guitar player, you have a bias for that instrument, so mix it to your liking, and then dial those guitars down a notch below what you would have liked. And I was taught that by a soundguy who was also a bass player. An exception to Rule No. 2.
@tombstoneharrystudios5847 ай бұрын
That was the way I learnt too!
@DMSProduktions6 ай бұрын
Yep, makes sense!
@mcpribs6 ай бұрын
Absolutely! I play guitar, bass, and drums, and that’s probably why bands are always happy. There’s a trust when you understand their fears and desires.
@KyleBrodie-l5dКүн бұрын
As a bass player once I first started mixing my own stuff forever and a half ago I had to tell myself I’m not Rex Brown, I’m not Steve Harris, I’m not Frank Bello, not everyone needs to hear me front and centre 😂 Polishing up my guitar and drumming gave me a better respect for mixing
@memetime17847 ай бұрын
Glenn: “you are awesome on guitar” Me: 😬
@Cyber6string7 ай бұрын
Same 😂
@coyote84276 ай бұрын
yeah brah not even my mum wants to listen to me play
@09philj7 ай бұрын
Spot's production on Husker Du's records is an amazing achievement because every part is somehow inaudible at the same time
@jimmygee32196 ай бұрын
Misfits Earth AD is another great example of Spot’s uhhhh…. Unique…. style
@WickedFesterBand7 ай бұрын
Glen, yes I am a guitar player. I am old. 63. I finally can record at home inexpensively. Thank you for all your help. What helps mixing my guitar? Marshall Silver Jubilee plugin that came with my Focusrite. I can see why you preach re amping. I record with “my sound” and then adjust settings on play back to make it sit well in the mix. Hell, I can even change the amp plugin. IRs, whatever. Now I don’t use real drums. They are from software I have but the bass and any keys are me. What great fun this is and thanks again for your help.
@k2rocksstl7 ай бұрын
Unholy HELL the advertisement interruptions in this video!
@stevenedmund56807 ай бұрын
I don't know why anyone would edit while isolating one instrument and not listening the whole thing , awesome video Glenn
@seannicholes7 ай бұрын
Yeah, that is absolutely something that guitar player mixers like myself do. Luckily I learned about that one pretty early.
@morbidmanmusic7 ай бұрын
Well, it depends on what and why you are editing, to be able to make a proper choice on that... right? Yes!
@anotheryoutubed7 ай бұрын
There's times for everything. EQing a guitar without the mix going is pretty silly though.
@cope8477 ай бұрын
Joke's on you, I'm not awesome on guitar.
@hounsdjentlow30746 ай бұрын
Relatable 😂
@nathonc49577 ай бұрын
Great to see some mixing videos! Keep it up Glenn!
@LasseHuhtala6 ай бұрын
Come on, that wasn't bad. It had character.
@AdamZiokowski6667 ай бұрын
Great video as usual and a nice Hesu cab in the background. Cheers from Poland 🤘🍻🍃
@denverrandy71437 ай бұрын
Love this Channel!!! Keep it up,Glenn.👍
@allendean98077 ай бұрын
1. Waves has an abbey road headphone sim that sounds great. Worth a listen. 2. Your vocalist is key. Bad vocals, buried vocals, thin vocals, nonsensical lyrics, and you can have the heaviest riff in the world. No one cares. 3. When i mix vocals, i make their volume generally the same level as the snare hit. 4. AUTOMATE….. if your rhythms are the same volume throughout your guitar solos; you’re gonna have a fight on your hands. 1-2db is all you need. 5. Bass….bass….bass… you want your guitars to sound heavier? Burn your copy of …and justice for all, and get a great bass tone. 6. Songwriters!! Look into pond5. Consider writing stock music. Max 2 minute songs, that teach you to get to the point in 8 bars. It will do wonders for your songwriting, riff writing, and composition. I try to do a 0-day challenge: write as many 2 minutes tracks as i can, one a day, for 30 days. Post em all to pond5, sell them for 5 bucks each. Sales don’t matter. It’s the challenge of writing as many riffs, beats, and Melodie’s in as many genres you can, as fast as possible in 30 days. You’ll love the challenge. It will improve your mixes. It will teach you to cut the needlessness from your songs. And, usually, some of those riffs will be expanded into full length tracks! 7. Headphones. If you cannot use speakers; i can’t due to the constraints of my workspace- get GOOD, flat response headphones. My favorite closed back are the audio technica ATH40’s. My go to for open backs are the AT 770’s. I use both when mixing, because they offer different plus and minus’s. Cheers to all, and see your mixes on the livestream mix show soon!!! AD
@allendean98076 ай бұрын
@TwistedMetalMinion thanks! I have to give credit to Glenn, however. I chased bass sims for years. CLA bass, tone knob, parallax, you name it. His bass plug in simply works great, every time. Also, his mix reviews took my mixes in much better direction, with his advice, and the tips from his community… i always suggest sending in a track- it’s made a huge difference for the better!
@RealNomadicus7 ай бұрын
Looking healthy Glen! Congrats!
@crunchyfrog5557 ай бұрын
I don't do metal, as my area is more synth based, but one of the biggest hurdles I had was indeed with the EQ overuse. It's similar to when you first start out and make the mistake of pushing too much volume on a channel when you want to hear it ending up with a mess. Because the natural inclination is to add more until it resolves, when that's often the worst with audio. It can't be over emphasised that turning off the EQ and running the mix, then adding it bit by bit on the fly is a great way of gradually getting it right. One thing I normally do when using a drum machine (such as the Elektron Model:Samples) is bang in my rhythm track, get it feeling right, and when it comes to time to add it to the mix I start with just the bass drum, and add each part going up through the range, EQing on the fly to make them stand out individually. Of course you need to be careful not to have it so that it swamps everything else in your mix, but it's for me by far the quickest route to get up and running.
@trajectoryunown7 ай бұрын
I've recently learned there are quite a few musicians from more extreme metal subgenres (specifically black metal) that also love and even produce synth music. Turns out, metal composition works really well with synths in the same way that classical compositions work with metal instrumentation. I recently subscribed to a someone by the name of BLAIDD here on KZbin who makes synthwave covers of metal tracks. You should check him out. Might be right up your alley.
@crunchyfrog5557 ай бұрын
@@trajectoryunown You're right - there's often crossovers as that's one major I watch Glenn. It always pays to get as broad a base as you can. And thanks for the recommendation but no thanks. I truly cannot stand metal or anything like that. I'm more for classic rock and British indie music as I'm an old git.
@crunchyfrog5556 ай бұрын
@@MartonKovac-Tikmajer-xk1qh I don't need to as I use hardware. I don't particularly like using software. Not accessible enough for me, plus it ain't what I'm used to.
@crunchyfrog5556 ай бұрын
@@MartonKovac-Tikmajer-xk1qh Plus that's not really the sound I'm looking for at all.
@MrLessthandave897 ай бұрын
It'd be great to see a video of you doing a full mix using dearVR, then playing it through monitors and seeing how you'd change things
@Meepup6 ай бұрын
What helped me is to listen to a lot of music, a lot of different genres. And really paying attention to every little detail going on in the song.
@ianmusicstein6 ай бұрын
Ironically the main complaint I had about my song "Torn Apart" was that it was too short at a mere 2 min 18, I might be okay on that point. I know on this one the drums are lower in the mix, however that was a deliberate choice. Great video as always
@aaaaa111aaaaa7 ай бұрын
As a Bassist its really difficult to record while putting in effort not to drool all over my bass
@MrClydie_Po_Po7 ай бұрын
Gleeeeeaaan!!! Cheers bro, it’s all about the tonewood, bruh!!
@revivedfears7 ай бұрын
So *warm* much *sustain*
@smeemusic7 ай бұрын
And new premium pickups
@JerryTheVeganRockstar7 ай бұрын
You’re all wrong, it’s in the plectrum
@smeemusic7 ай бұрын
@@JerryTheVeganRockstar jazz III or gtfo lol
@fateunleashed96807 ай бұрын
Yep this is why if you get a tone knob made out of wood your life will change with the added tone from the wood lol
@xxczerxx6 ай бұрын
I only started mixing the last few months, and the more I'm doing it the more I'm realising I make music I wouldn't listen to which is giving me serious pause for thought. I was not expecting this to be the outcome but it's given an insight I'd have never gleaned otherwise. I highly recommend people do it just to let themselves truly become a listener of their work
@MikJames-d1g7 ай бұрын
Hey good on you man, you've restored my faith that the over the top reaction to things is just part of the show. Good to see you're still open to trying new things. There are certainly cheaper options for open back headphones that still hold up (Philips SHP9600) It really is incredible that just removing the cover on the back of headphones could make such a difference, I can see why you probably dismissed it as just another "it's in the pickups bro" argument. 🤘😈👍
@MikJames-d1g7 ай бұрын
Oh nevermind, I see "it's in the proprietary software bro". 😆
@zazoomatt6 ай бұрын
I Appreciate You Glen So MUCH. Enjoy ALL your Takes on Guitar, Recording and LIFE !
@bensan19906 ай бұрын
Taking a break is actually a good advice. I was mixing a song for a band we had in covid times, I think I spent like 3 or 4 hours working on the song, cause after recording it, I jumped to mixing and mastering, and when I processed everything, according to me, it was an awesome mix, but when I showed it to the band members, they started pointing stuff like the compression was killing the mix, some parts were louder and then the compression hit it hard to lower the sound. I was irritated with the comments, to be honest, to the point that I was gonna send the stems to the other guys criticizing my work, but then I calmed down, slept my respective 8 hours, then checked the mix... guess what? I had to redo the whole mix, cause even in the EQ I messed it up. After that embarrassing moment, I learned to take breaks so I could do a better job mixing the songs.
@conluciusplayz7 ай бұрын
God damn man... Your mixing/mastering advice & tips are deadset priceless...😱😃🤟🏻 If I only I had the patience to do all that "HARD WORK"...🤬💥🦵🏻 Lol🤣, I just want to play guitar but I got to learn all "this stuff", so I might sound as good as it does "to me" in my bedroom"🤣...
@fokeyjo6 ай бұрын
Great tip about EQ'ing in the full mix and keeping it minimal. I am probably guilty of a lot of what you said in that segment. *Sigh* I'll have to move onto making different mistakes!
@KershawsGoat7 ай бұрын
Great video, Glenn. It's cool to see you trying out the Dear VR stuff. I have been curious of what you would think of solutions like that now that they're becoming more common. I'm sure it's not a replacement for actual monitors in a mix room but they always struck me as a decent alternative for situations where regular monitors weren't an option. Keep it up.
@innercreation677 ай бұрын
Hey Glenn. In my case you are absolutely right about guitar players making horrible mixes. I'm a guitar player but years ago I decided to quit the band life to build my own non-pro tiny home studio so I could record and master my own home-made music. I've finally managed to get the mixing gear that I wanted and needed to reach that goal including musical instruments such as a drum-set, synth and a bass guitar. In my quest to become a descent self-educated mixer, I've bumped into several issues. The most frustrating thing was that most tracks sounded awful on other devices and honestly...I couldn't get my head around this. So, Yeah....Turns out that I was dramatically over-EQ-ing every single instrument (especially guitars) in solo mode which fucked-up the frequencies of the total mix. Fortunately for me I stranded here on your channel a while ago and since then things started to get better. I'm not there yet at all but your believes, sharings and advises are a blast and golden. A big thank you and shout out to you, man! Love your (re)presentation and insights of great things that really matter in this business. Greetings, John from the Netherlands.
@fleekwoodmac37057 ай бұрын
Glen ----- Your 2003 mix sounds way better than new "polished" mixes. I prefer raw, real instrument mixes. Reminded me of the album In/Casino/Out.
@nihilistlivesmatter6 ай бұрын
Can just imagine Glenn producing Hendrix: 'Timmy!! how many times do I have to tell you? the guitar is NOT the focus!'
@mr_travismc17 ай бұрын
10:48 --- That is the hardest / most difficult thing to do... rural US life, I was taught that you get up with chickens. Breaks are for wimps. Naps are for Sunday afternoons. Then Military life - only lazy people nap, don't get caught napping... you're permitted four hours of sleep, no one promised that it would be four consecutive hours... then civilian life -- only lazy people sleep... if you aren't putting in 16 to 20 hours a day, seven days a week... you're just lazy... you deserve to be poor. I'm in 50's and my body is falling apart but I feel guilty closing my eyes before 9 pm because there is something ALWAYS that must be done.
@hhaste7 ай бұрын
Better to get the proper amount of sleep and put in good quality work than less sleep and half-assed tired work.
@antonkovalenko3647 ай бұрын
Same.
@TonyWinston7 ай бұрын
The best comedy is the truth - very funny glenn! (and informative)
@godofspacetime3337 ай бұрын
No 2 is so true. I’m relatively new to mixing, but EVERY TIME I start getting a mix close to being finished I end up needing to take off EQs that I did early on when mixing that track. Especially if I spend a couple days away from it. I’ll go back and see these wild EQ moves on the vocals or guitars that just puzzle me, bypass the EQ plugin, and suddenly it all sounds a little better and maybe only needed a 3db boost in the highs or 2db cut in the lower mids or just a db of volume. I just finished mixing an EP for a band I recorded and half the vocal tracks, and a lot of the guitars, ended up being basically flat in the final mix. Turns out all that work I did in the tracking stages paid off and I didn’t need to fix as much as I thought I did, and there’s no rule that says you need to EQ everything.
6 ай бұрын
you're amazing, thanks for giving your expertise and knowledge to the community
@nates27 ай бұрын
Gotta love how Glenn talks to us guitarists and then talks to drummers like they are his newborns :)
@zenorchestra13357 ай бұрын
A lot of sense spoken. Direct. To the point!
@pemalebacon24207 ай бұрын
there's no such thing as a guitar player anymore Glen. It's now guitar player, bass player, singer, drum programmer and producer.
@sgt.grinch32996 ай бұрын
I’m very happy that I am nearly deaf. I can’t hear the bad mixes, country, or modern pop music. Most music sounds like I’m riding my trike blasting music through my six speakers. Lots of ambiance and wind noise. When I do listen to music for enjoyment I use my hearing aids and block everything else out. ✌️✌️
@MarcelCoenenOfficial6 ай бұрын
Spot On! This is all so true, these headphones look great, I am using a sennheiser pair now which are great for tracking, but these look great for mixing, will definately check them out!
@tonzokinawa7 ай бұрын
Sticks N’ Stones! Played with them in Rochester, NY! Very cool music and cool guys
@Inlay766677 ай бұрын
Write music that people want to hear more than once. Easier said than done but it’s been my mantra since I heard those words. Thanks mate!
@ВячеславЗамулов6 ай бұрын
To be honest, in modern metal, there's opposite problem: drums are too loud and the guitars are buried, huh
@luisnunes386322 күн бұрын
It happens and I'm starting to notice a trend towards dull mixes where the high notes are not cutting through. That may work for brutal death metal, but in more melodic sub-genres it sucks all the fun right out of the songs.
@dnamusicchallenge59957 ай бұрын
Guilt af.😅 thanks for the help. Tough love. Eq as a group with context as a band performing as a team.
@KaddysJamKave7 ай бұрын
I've heard some of your work Fricker... And it is anything but top notch 😂
@skymoon34717 ай бұрын
I just went to your channel, come back when you can record a spoken vocal for KZbin and then we’ll talk about mixing 😉
@KaddysJamKave6 ай бұрын
@@skymoon3471 wtf are you on about?
@rram9926 ай бұрын
This channel is the pinnacle of metal mixing!
@Gate11Studio7 ай бұрын
I love that the Sennheiser headphones come with a multi environment listening capability. I wish my audio-technicia r70x reference headphones came with something like that. You make the best mix using all environments and it's going to work.
@1loveMusic20037 ай бұрын
Got the Drum eq and it's awsome thanks Glen!
@wibblegorm6 ай бұрын
> Kurt Ballou has entered the chat
@Shycartel6 ай бұрын
> Kevin Shields > Chad Ginsburg > Pierre Remilliard > Justin Broadrick > Steve Albini > Buster Odeholm > Keith Merrow
@franckydookie7 ай бұрын
I actually really like the 2003 mixing
@MATEAKENNY12347 ай бұрын
I have a spare room at home and realized there's a closet full of clothes, about 3 matresses laying around, and a shitload of old books and Lego boxes. Not looking to avoid spending money on some sort of acoustic treatment but I think all those house ítems can be put to good use. Is there any chance of a video that expands on acoustic treatment? Love the videos, greetings from the land of burritos and tequila! (Mexico (Yes, I can get away with the joke cuz I'm Mexican)).
@pitaorj7 ай бұрын
great video glenn!!! keep the good work. Just sharing here. I`m from Brazil, yesterday I went to Thomann and guess what???? I bought another guitar that I don`t need but really made me happy LOL. WTF is that place!!! It is THE CANDY STORE and I was just the fat hungry little kid...
@GurnBograt19867 ай бұрын
Glenn, these are awesome tips! Thank you!!
@Boosty_Boost6 ай бұрын
this is the best video ive ever seen you make champ. hell yea
@nicholasbstone7 ай бұрын
I've actually had the opposite problem. Being the guitar player, knowing all the guitar parts and being so "used to it" and excited about recording, my older mixes all suffer from having the guitars too LOW in volume. I was so excited to hear the drums, vocals and even bass that I let my guitar tracks take the back seat. Making my mixes sound thin, weak, "missing something". I was guilty of the same bias and it still resulted in a mix where the guitars weren't properly leveled.
@Durkhead2 ай бұрын
@@nicholasbstone maybe they've shouldve turned them lower so they couldnt hear you at all
@artistbyknight44767 ай бұрын
Hey Glenn. Thank you SO much for your insight on getting the right sound out of a guitar. As a 45 year old getting into playing I realized my only concern for the guitar should be its PLAYABILITY! I have pretty severe arthritis focusing on my hands. I don’t get many chances to get into learning how to play, but honestly how the guitar plays helps me with extending that time. I was shopping for a guitar to learn on at (insert major music store chain) and played about 6 different guitars ranging from mid 3 digits up to 4 in terms of dollars. Even though I noticed easier and harder playability styles while playing the ONE chord I learned, I DID notice each guitar SOUNDED identical when fed into the pedal and amp they had for display. Like, LITERALLY the same. Long story short, I wound up ordering a cheap Amazon guitar for less than $200 to learn on based on reviews on the guitars easy playability. Neck shape. Action. Physical feel. The guitar I bought feels VERY close to the $2800 one I tried in the store… and imagine that, it sounds VERY similar to that guitar through my amp sim and headphones. Weeeiiirrdd. I must be a newbie guitar player who shouldn’t bother playing because I can’t hear the tone in the wood and the “expressive mids and vibrant highs” from the pickups. 🙄 thanks to your insight I saved about $2k. I will however save a bit for a sweet Solar that you reviewed when I get better if for nothing than to support those that support you. Keep up the good fight, sincerely from SoCal! 🤘🔥🤘
@HUGEHARDTHICKANDVEINY7 ай бұрын
The biggest difference I've noticed is switching from bridge to neck pickups on the same guitar. I mean just with the selector switch rather than installing new pickups. Even with high gain that sounds quite a bit different, but I didn't notice it as much when I started.
@bluecollarguitarist7 ай бұрын
Love the Hitchhikers reference at the end lol 😂
@pmiddlet727 ай бұрын
Like a number of other commenters, I, too have that 'I just can't walk away from this until it's solved' OCD BS. It can be torture, and training yourself to step back (generally overcoming the fear of the whole 'I've gotta restart this thing' can be a mixed bag at best. I try to time my work around doing some exercise that clears my head - lifting, cardio, jiu-jitsu, or hey, getting some practice in on another instrument (keyboard, kit, bass, etc). Not always successful, because I know something else will come up (generally called life) to interrupt what I'm working on. So sometimes the OCD is part of the fear of 'will I be able to get back to it with the intent in my mind before the pause?''. Sometimes the frustration fuels a creative moment, other times it crushes any semblance of it. What I know Glenn is that I watch your show for inspiration, ideas, and plenty of sarcasm (you get my full praise for adding anything Curb in your shows!). That's what really helps it all,: being able to sling the snark and cope with as much humor as can be piled on to dissipate some of those dark clouds. This is what I appreciate about you. Now to go back and work on my shitty pinch harmonics :). #isuckatmyjob
@DavelyDriven7 ай бұрын
Greatest compliment ever: "He means well"
@BlazonStone7 ай бұрын
Fantastic video. Makes me rethink some of my own choices how to do things.
@iAmL3J3ND7 ай бұрын
Nice video Ima have to check those headphones out!
@bryandraughn98306 ай бұрын
Satriani's "If" has a killer sounding mix. Especially the drums. It's not hyper production or anything but the mix has a style to it.
@66falcon996 ай бұрын
Playing in bands for decades, and having to set up and run the live band sound for all that time, helped me in recording live bands. The thing I learned most, is, "All things in moderation!" Don't over-do things. Start the sound small and grow it. Don't start the sound big and try backing it down. Less is more. Trend towards turning EQ frequencies down, not up. Make sure you here the vocals first, and add everything else from there. And, of course, make sure the musicians can hear themselves and have a good monitor mix. Doing this alone will win you many musician friends!
@schleppvideos7 ай бұрын
at least glad you spoke for yourself as well instead of just shitting on everyone else. stepping up!
@CreativeMindsAudio7 ай бұрын
Dear VR is incredible. Love that software. Gotta get me some open back headphones at one point, but the dear VR is great for now.
@THE-CRT7 ай бұрын
You ever think of comparing bridge types? We know pickups don’t matter but what about if there’s a strat style bridge, or a Jazzmaster style bridge, or a stop bar, or a tunomatic or a mastery on the jazz master style bridge? I’ve seen this video of this guy Aaron Rash comparing a Gotoh tune o matic to the stock bridge on a vintage fender mustang, and it sounds like the gotoh holds the bass notes out more but it may just be that guitar player mind of “Oh it looks different it must sound different”
@mikearmitage41477 ай бұрын
Always love a good Hitchhiker’s reference.
@Frank_Kreepy7 ай бұрын
I agree with most of this ... but ... In a era of free music access on a global scale with unrestricted format, I think there is a place for 12 min epic djent and the likes and some of us actually look for that. Now the problem to me feels more along the lines of understanding what the intention behind the work was when the artist wrote it. "I'll make something so unique, everyone will buy it" 😅 This is a great way to explore possibilities for musicians to expand their knowledge and/or craft ( or just get it out of their system anyway ) but being attached to an outcome ( specially money/fame driven) is probably the problem. I Loved the creative act by rick ruben addressing this very subject among others. I remember an interview with NiN saying that he felt head like a hole didn't feel like a real song because it was done in under ( 4h I think? ) And the only reason it made it on the album was because he got convinced to do it. I think this might resonate with a lot of big head composers. Easy doesn't mean bad... even when it's you doing it 😂 Keep up the good work Glenn!
@MigsMusings7 ай бұрын
The heavy metal equivalent of Vogon Poetry :D LOL, I'm going to steal that and hope I can use it in a conversation somehow!
@onoesmurlocs7 ай бұрын
very true, but it even goes back to the arrangement and sound choices for me , I think the hardest thing for me as a guitarist learning to produce was I spent years playing guitar by my self so I would try to make it sounds as big and full as possible . So when I record a guitar part to drums when starting to produce, I had essential used up most of the frequency space in a mix with one instrument and trying to add more parts it just got more and more cluttered , looking at the tracks of great songs really opened my eyes to the fact that most instruments parts are sparse and underwhelming on their own but collective you get a full sound .
@mauri79596 ай бұрын
Glad Glen didn't hate on us Keyboard player mixes. (My mixes suck)
@davidbaron88927 ай бұрын
I'm a guitarist/producer. My genre is somewhere between 70s Heavy ROCK and 80s Melodic Metal. My first and highest priority ALWAYS is getting the DRUMS sounding AWESOME. Then bass. Once I have that, everything else is gravy. I KNOW I can always get a great guitar sound and fit it in with the drums and bass. After I track guitars, I take off my "guitarist hat," and put on my "producer hat" for the rest of the process. At that point, it's about making everything sound as good as I can make it. The KEY to getting the best sounds is getting everything sounding as good as possible AT THE SOURCE before you ever hit record. I use far less gain than Glenn does (think 80s metal). I used to change the guitar, the amp, or both to achieve sonic complexity between the left and right side rhythm guitars. That works fine, but since I've been watching Glenn's videos, I've been doing more of keeping the guitar/amp the same and changing the speaker/cab part of my guitar sound. It's been pretty revelatory. The sounds are just as good, if not better. I'm getting that complexity I like, but I'm also retaining a track-to-track sonic continuity that I like. That is, I'm still getting a recognizable humbucker-through-Marshall sound on every track, but by changing the speaker/cab for different songs, I get different colors without it sounding like I've changed the whole rig. 🤘
@NiCadHeliPilot6 ай бұрын
The djent epic one, though. 😆 Here is my "unsolicited advice": For those that are stuck with formatting their music, here is a good template to start with: 1. Intro, about 4 to 8 bars; 2. Verse-and-chorus, 8 bars each; 3. Second verse-and-chorus, same length as the first verse-and-chorus combo; 4. Bridge/breakdown/whatever... NO MORE THAN 12 BARS! 5. If you desire, a lead solo. NO LONGER THAN 16 BARS!!! NO EXCEPTIONS!!! 6. (Optional) Third verse; 7. Third chorus. If you omitted a third verse, you may fill the remaining 8 bars with a repeat of this chorus; 8. Outro not longer than 12 bars in length. If you listen to a lot of older music, they usually follow this format. It is a guideline more than an a rule, but it's enough to get your foot in the door. Remember: Keep it super simple!
@loucifersadventures5737 ай бұрын
Haha. I love videos like this. You can instantly spot who it's pi55ed off in the comments. Been mixing since about 2012 now and I'm a guitarist. You can tell such huge differences in mentality by listening to them between then and now. I guess that is the entire point. If you're not putting on your "producer" hat and youre only going to mix with guitar in mind, never going to sound good. I'd argue that a well thought out mix where the guitars arent the sole focus actually makes the guitars sound better. Just my 2 cents. Take it or leave it.
@bandsbikesandboozereviews7 ай бұрын
Dude, be really interested to see you do the comparison with the Mackie 8 bus analogue desk
@michaelmayton31776 ай бұрын
I love my Mackie 8 bus.
@TheCSteve6 ай бұрын
This guy speaks truth ... Its exactly what I hear too, and pushes me away from metal music and when i was young i listened only too metal .. At least almost every album i buyed was metal like Kreator and Slayer and Entombed and Benediction etc etc .. Those where great because you could here what they sing and they didnt use timestamps in studion on drum (Time Correction) .. That last thing is the most anoying to make the drum unhuman .. You destroy your mix with that because it sounds not raw and hard anymore but too polished .. These days i listen too unknown bands and not metal but more alternative rock music. And most of the metal vocal guys and womans are lame too because of the same thing, go sing instead of being dependend on FX Tip: Buy a Boss Katana 100 or a Kemper and you dont need Amp VST anymore and you have no latency if you use the line out or a microphone or even together at once .. Why this is a tip ? - You will make the sound on your amp so you dont have to use FX on guitar in your DAW if you do it the right way, this will save you a lot of mixing time .. And use a quality microphone like a Shure Beta 58A for voice and the SM57 for your cabinet (Cheap option) or the Neuman TL 102 but thats an expensive one around 575 dollar but its good very good
@antonkovalenko3647 ай бұрын
Thanks for all the great advice over the years, Glenn. I know it’s downright blasphemous to shoot for black metal that doesn't soundclike it was recorded in a cardboard box in the middle of the woods, but the tools have never been more accessible. I see no reason to not utilize them.
@A.Moortal7 ай бұрын
I've been mixing on the Slate VSX headphones and it's been a game changer.
@needsLITHIUM7 ай бұрын
My biggest issue is that as vocalist and guitar player, I overcompensate on trying to NOT over emphasize them in the mix that I end up making the drums, bass, and ambience/keys way too loud, instead. This after years of making the guitar and vocals way too prominent, as Glenn said. I also had a habit of mixing on $20 sony headphones or cheap logitech speakers. Now I use a pair of flat response open back headphones or proper studio monitors.
@JoanRaba217 ай бұрын
Vinland Saga opening 3 cover intensifies
@Gainovermg7 ай бұрын
Mixing WITH the full mix playing is something I need to reprogram my brain to do. Everything I’ve heard over the years talks about soloing, then eq, then unsolo and see if you have it right.
@theelmagoo7 ай бұрын
Curious what your thoughts are on these Sennheiser's vs. the Slate Audio VSX?
@Typical.Anomaly6 ай бұрын
I kinda like the raw sound of that first mix! I've definitely heard worse, e.g. many Misfits bootlegs.
@numanuma207 ай бұрын
One thing you forgot was using compression to make your tracks sound loud. When bounce midi tracks they sound way to quit so I use compression to make them louder.
@philfrite53247 ай бұрын
Bonus points for Vogon Poetry! I bet you know where your towel is as well...
@FatNorthernBigot7 ай бұрын
If I ask a guitarist what they think of a mix, they'll want me to turn-up the guitars. Same with the bass player. If I ask the singer, they don't care... They're busy chasing women.
@BrettWMcCoy7 ай бұрын
EQing advice is excellent! I use Mixbus32C for my mixes and the built-in 32C channel strips make it so easy to EQ, compress, etc on the fly while the mix is going.
@sonofromel7 ай бұрын
Don't shit on your early work. I like the Wolfbait mix. Misfits vibe. No lies.
@freepadz62417 ай бұрын
I kept listening to that bit over and over. So strange sounding.
@Sinisterbvnny6 ай бұрын
Honestly, the best advice ive used to check my guitar-player bias is mixing a track in mono to check level balances. It really shows whats too loud. If it sounds good in mono, itll usually sound good in stereo
@Bob-of-Zoid7 ай бұрын
I'm sort of relegated to having to use headphones, and thanks to your suggestion (much earlier video) I went out and grabbed a pair of Bayer Dynamics DT 990 Pro's and they are great.
@chadsux7 ай бұрын
On the last part about "editing" yourself, I both agree and disagree. Storytime: My old band wrote, recorded, mixed, and mastered a full length album a little over a decade ago. We had so much fun writing and playing those songs. Now, when I go back and listen to the almost 53 minute long album, I WISH someone had been there to tell us to edit some of that shit out. We just kept writing riffs because it was fun. Looking back, it was about 20 minutes too long! On the flip side, if it's a good song, then there's no reason to set a time limit to it! I listen to Metallica's AJFA (and have since the late 80's) and it NEVER gets old. NONE of those songs were under 5:45. Symphony X has written two 20+ minute songs that don't seem long to me because they are so well done. Of course, they're absolutely top musicians and composers, so ymmv. Music is an expression. So...express yourself. Sometimes it sucks. Sometimes it's good. But always have people whose taste you trust listen to things and give you feedback!!!
@wilkinsi7 ай бұрын
Liking the idea of those headphones, given I live in shared accomodation
@OGM_OriginalGameMusic7 ай бұрын
Glenn!! I have a video idea I'd like to share, if thats ok with you. So, you talk about the snake oils of guitar (expensive pickup, tubes etc.) A lot How about a video series where you go through these items of luxury and go through when they ARE applicable (if at all). It'd also be to cool see this series span beyond the guitar (like mokn gel for drums or... i dno, dog treats for bass players) Cheers man. You're one of the best. I've learned a lot from you (and I've finally been able to do a cool DBZ metal cover cause of your teachings)
@SleepingLionsProductions7 ай бұрын
About that Sennheiser headphone software: isnt that literally just an impulse response of different environments put in a convolution reverb?
@anotheryoutubed7 ай бұрын
Correct! Which means if your headphones aren't completely FRFR, are you really getting anything out of doing that? Nope.
@SleepingLionsProductions7 ай бұрын
@@anotheryoutubed I guess follow up question is if the "studio quality headphones" are actually FRFR? I can't find the frequency response graphs of some of my "studio" headphones.
@bobdoerr95367 ай бұрын
As a guitar player whose been an audio engineer for like 20 years, I remember that phase of mixing guitars way too loud. Sometimes if i'm mixing a show and not many people are i still mix guitar a tiny bit loud (if they're good). I just wanna hear the guitars bro I know im selfish... but seriously if you do it long enough you grow out of this phase (hopefully)
@NotVerySkilledBass7 ай бұрын
how are those Senneheisers compared to VSX?
@Exwalmartian7 ай бұрын
I have some recording gear and haven't really done much with it yet. I'm absolutely dreading everything involved with micing up the instruments for me and the drummer. Also, mixing sounds like an absolutely soul crushing slog to me. I just want to finish songs and get them recorded. It's the songs that I have passion for and actually playing them. The recording part is not something I am looking forward to, but have to do it because recording otherwise is impossibly expensive
@1loveMusic20037 ай бұрын
I only use solo for editing now and finding resonances and everything sounds better now that I do everything in context. Who would have thought that ha!
@livebassngames6 ай бұрын
Last trick is great... I walk away from mixing everytime and I SUCCEEDED at making no good mix.
@METARIOT_BAND7 ай бұрын
Glenn, hi! Do you still do mix reviews? I would brag about a couple of tracks)) Thanks in advance)