What are some mixing mistakes you used to make? How did you fix them?
@matty6strings1314 жыл бұрын
Produce Like A Pro Ha! As I type this, you are covering it in the video. I had a love affair with compression for a time. I compressed everything because I wanted to, not because I should have. I also compressed too much. Some of my early mixes got super dense but sounded really small. Its been a long learning curve but a necessary journey of experience!
@kalweason13364 жыл бұрын
You the best
@jeffbieber11114 жыл бұрын
Produce Like A Pro setting up my trigger and gate parameters, and then changing my compression threshold on toms for example. I started to notice missing or very dull sounding Tom hits. I realized I was blocking signal from going into my “Slate Trigger 2” Love these videos man
@russgaefe15544 жыл бұрын
Just recently fixed a long time mistake. I've been mixing with a subwoofer for years. I decided to take it out of the mixing equation just to see if it would help. Yep! It helped. So much easier to hear the low end and how it should sound in a mix. Getting rid of it has totally sped up things as well. Thank you for your videos Warren!!
@artifexpro-0004 жыл бұрын
I use to put plugins on the master track. Lol
@darrellrobinson93544 жыл бұрын
The more I've learned about mixing, the messier my recordings have become. I went back yesterday to listen to a few songs from last year and I wondered why they sounded so good compared to my recent tracks. It was mainly because I knew less and mostly left the tracks alone.
@Producelikeapro4 жыл бұрын
Hi Darrell Robinson exactly!! Haha Number 5 do less! There’s far too much confusing information out there! I highly recommend listening to the mix that someone is doing when they recommend techniques!
@JamesJohnson-hb1me4 жыл бұрын
@Darrell Robinson - Me too!
@neovxr4 жыл бұрын
It is about being bold enough! You need to tie the knot on the package, and decide that this has to be sufficient. All sounds are somehow playing in the ballpark. Diminishing returns.
@Kaotix_music4 жыл бұрын
here's how I see it works. Your mixing is decent when you start, then you search for all this kowneledge and hear so much knowledge that probably doesn't even apply to you, you worry too much about the technical parts, over time you start to learn what works for you based off experiences and your mixes tart to come alive and sound better than ever. But some advice isn't the best, He says in the video "dont compress synths" that's gonna be a hard no for me. I will never ever put out a track with synths that have no saturation or compression on them. Its just needed in my genre
@dzamirokvaj4 жыл бұрын
so true!!!!
@matabercrombie38164 жыл бұрын
The idea of not everything needing to be stereo had a huge positive impact on my mixes. I've started bringing overheads in to 50/50 and then playing with a mono vs stereo set of room mics on drums lately. In the verse or anywhere where the guitars are smaller or single tracked, I'll use the stereo pair of room mics panned far left/right to give a nice big drum sound where the drums are more exposed, but then in the chorus or any areas where I have big left/right stereo guitars I'll switch to just a mono room mic in the center. The result in the mix is that those stereo guitars suddenly sound much wider simply because the drums sound narrower. For years I struggled with how to make guitars feel wider, and I always felt widening plugins just make stuff sound weird and phasy. Turned out all you really need to do is make everything else in the mix feel narrower than the thing you want to feel widest. It's pretty simple once you realize it. It's all about context and relationships. If everything in the mix is panned wide then the mix SOUNDS narrow, but if your ear can hear the difference between a narrow sound and a wide sound, all of a sudden the stage opens up.
@samchoate17194 жыл бұрын
Mat Abercrombie this is a great point. Thank you
@weareallbeingwatched46023 жыл бұрын
Center panned mono is something I avoid. Unless there is a center speaker.
@dirtyharry18814 жыл бұрын
It's still amazing to me, how you share all these incredible ideas, carved out of years of experience, FOR FREE on KZbin... thanks man
@HeathAllyn4 жыл бұрын
I just recently experienced #4 in person. We were doing one of those quarantine collaborations where we each record separately then I would put them all together. I did my guitar and vocals, then next I got the drums. So since I didn't have the whole track yet I just started tweaking the drums. It was a stereo track of the full kit so I didn't have individual control. The kick drum had a certain resonant frequency I didn't like, so I EQ'd it out and got the kick drum sounding way better to my ears. Then I got the bass part and put the whole song together. At that point, I felt like you couldn't hear the kick enough. I thought maybe I'd try a compressor on the bass sidechained to the kick, so the bass would duck out of the way a bit when the kick hit, but I wasn't happy with how that sounded either. On a whim I took the EQ off the kick, and suddenly everything fell in to place and sounded great. That "ugly" frequency that I didn't like on the soloed kit, was apparently just perfect in the context of the whole mix.
@els1f4 жыл бұрын
Mistake number 1: picking up my phone too often; 2: scrolling through KZbin; 3: watching incredibly well made videos of very affable English people doing what I should probably be doing rn instead 😆 4&5: repeat until I feel bad 😂
@Producelikeapro4 жыл бұрын
Elsif haha we are all guilty of these things my friend!!
@costanzauk4 жыл бұрын
I suffer from this too. It's actually a thing in psychology called the "information bias"
@ChrisDN4 жыл бұрын
At one point, I gave myself a limit of 2/3 plugins per track, no more. If I got to a point where I couldn't get something sounding right, I would go back and rethink it. It really helps you LEARN your plugins. Suddenly you're not using an EQ, tape emulation AND compression... you're selecting a single compressor based on the tonal changes it gives you.
@zachary9634 жыл бұрын
Chris Norris that is GENIUS! Trying that right away
@ChrisDN4 жыл бұрын
@@zachary963 I wouldn't go that far! But it forces you to train your ears. I didn't find it a quick process either. I would say I only began to reap the rewards a good year or so in. Totally depends on how many hours you put in to it of course!
@marksvideochannel35924 жыл бұрын
Wish I thought of that and had the self discipline, I have resorted to a Tascam DP32 so ALL I can do is basic eq, LCR and volume. I figure I can move to pc for further mixing if necessary. So far I am happy with what I get.
@Truthwizzard4 жыл бұрын
EQ instruments in solo mode, compression on everything, reverb on everything. These are my major mistakes that I made in the early years of trying to mix music. Through trial and error and a lot of listening to CDs in my wife's car. I figured out that I was doing something wrong what that was unclear to me. One day I took one of my mixes that I had not added compression EQ reverb to and I thought wow this sounds great.
@Denoneer4 жыл бұрын
Phenomenal advice. For a complete newcomer, number 5 is almost a relief to hear. The whole world of mixing and music production can be so overwhelming where you feel you have so much to learn just to be able to produce a single track, that it could almost put you off entirely. Hearing that you don’t need to do as much as you think you do is positively refreshing.
@jimp.72864 жыл бұрын
Been doing upright mono piano for a long time on denser tracks. Wide stereo piano can sound weird anyway. No one sticks their head inside a piano while someone is playing it, (hopefully lol),. If it was up on stage, most all the stereo would be reflections. So I send a bit of it out to a stereo reverb or space of some kind. Often mono drum overheads too. Solves so many problems and just works. You can always put a pseudo stereo plug on mono sources when it's really needed and that offers yet a different flavor of width. Cheers.
@huckwalton23074 жыл бұрын
This is the only channel I go to to not hear the same old stuff regurgitated over and over again. I don’t know how you make so many videos at the value that they are, but you have a gift sir.
@francolaria4 жыл бұрын
Excellent tips, Warren. I'd add to that, 'avoid song fatigue'. I can get too involved with a track, staying with it for too long and ending up losing perspective - more worryingly, losing the vibe and the initial inspiration. I write, arrange and mix my own music and I love the whole process. I've learned over the years that taking regular short breaks while working on a track is really important, but now I go even further. I'll take a break away from the track altogether, sometimes for several weeks. The moment I do that my creative soul is unleashed and I'm writing new material. When I eventually go back to a previous track I've been working on, fresh ears, I find that I've "done too much" - I definitely need to do less. So, I end up switching off plugins, and going back to the levels and panning. And the track starts to sound like music again. So, song fatigue I suppose is another way of saying, don't spend ages on a track. Get a good mix (not a perfect mix) as soon as you can, then leave it alone. Come back another day and if it still sounds great, trust in that. Which takes me to the other tip I'd add... know when to stop ;-)
@miltonex4 жыл бұрын
I need to re visit this video everytime when I start a new mix, thank you Warren
@spencechicago4 жыл бұрын
this is basic, yet absolutely brilliant advice that is clearly explained. One of the best 'mixing' advice videos I've ever seen
@Producelikeapro4 жыл бұрын
Hi spencechicago thanks ever so much my friend! I’m so glad to be able to help! Have a marvellous time recording, many thanks Warren
@craigburner12964 жыл бұрын
I've been mixing since 1985, and I can tell you this is all really good advice. Nice job man.
@akshaydabhadkarofficial51044 жыл бұрын
This man explained these concepts in half an hour. The school I went to took 3 months. It's all about the willingness to spread knowledge. Mixing is an art and we should treat it like its art. You have a like and a sub from my side and hope you get a lot more. I may purchase your yearly subscription soon.
@jacquelamontharenberg4 жыл бұрын
Great advice and reminder to keep it simple. Thank you Warren.
@vedasticks4 жыл бұрын
oh how true! im mainly a live enginner and so much of this ive done and also in studio stuff. its so easy in todays age with access to so much processing even live with waves multirack to have these chains and what u think sounds good and controlled is as you say boring, on the flip side. alot of people say cut dont boost. generally that is good advice byt sometimes you dont get that excitment by just cutting the informatiom you dont need. more so when using particular . the engineer who i forget who did some muse albums had some interesting methods of boosting ssl eqs into 1176 comps and his records sound pretty damn good. from what i remember he mentioned about the compressors taming resonances produced by big boosts. like anything audio there are no solid rules. experiment and use your ears. listen to what is happening when you make adjustments. you can make big moves to get your ear focused on what its doing then dial it back. as you get more experienced youll get more sensitive to small changes. most people arnt naturally sensitive to the small details it takes practive to tune you in. thats probably the reason for people over processing stuff because they are just not percieving thos small changes yet. but there is times where you will have to pull sometihing out by 10 plus dB or boost 6dB.'' most people are not that great until they get the basics. them it gets ok then it gets decent. the hard part is going from decent to awesome. the hard part is that sounding good technically and awesome is not the same thing. always great videos. so much to learn. as i said im a live sound engineer and dont do any commercial studio stuff but a good portion of your content has helped massivley in live sound engineering.
@scarfypedia2 жыл бұрын
I find I really enjoy parallel compression in electronic genres, it can bring out some of that organic groove that isn't always there naturally
@KaitavSapreMusic3 жыл бұрын
9:52 just love it! 😂👍 Excellent video, thank you! :)
@Producelikeapro3 жыл бұрын
Glad you enjoyed it!
@575garden4 жыл бұрын
I’ve been producing music for nearly 5 years now and this has to be one of the most insightful videos I’ve ever seen. Thank you, Warren. We’re all the richer from your great advice.
@babayaga17674 жыл бұрын
always start with a good sound source. instead of EQ, move a mic until you get a better sound
@Producelikeapro4 жыл бұрын
Absolutely!!
@cyndibowen94304 жыл бұрын
@@Producelikeapro sounds like a guy with a few years of live mixing under his belt.
@Jose_diazlife3 жыл бұрын
16:50 is the most game changing tip for me. I have been mixing for 4 years just in my bedroom and I never got any good mixes although I tried all the tips and tricks around fx etc. But when I started to mix everything together everything changed. Then you will get guided automatically by how everything sounds together instead of trying to figure out instrument by instrument. Mix everything together. Sounds stupid but it helps so much.
@DarkSideofSynth4 жыл бұрын
Absolutely priceless tips. Although we may already know all of this, we often tend to forget - working in the box makes it almost impossible NOT to look at the screen, and all those fancy curves and coloured bars, and all those numbers but music is about SOUND, it's a DAW, it's not Photoshop ;) And as for not go overboard with plugins, I think it's an easy trap to fall into. After all, sooner or later it's like with any kind of gear, we may become 'collectors'. We have invested in them - or even when they're free - they are our 'toys', we almost feel obligated to use them. And since we work in stages, doing very little or nothing at all in the mixing stage may lead to one to think we're not really doing our job. The thing is that, just like while tracking, when the 1st take is perfect for what you need, so can be your 'rough mix'. A good song with a good sound isn't always the result of days and days of tweaking 200 parameters on a gazillion VSTs where every note and breath is quantised to a T, and where every instrument sits perfectly in its frequency band, and your levels are perfect to 1/100 of a dB. Just have fun and be happy with what you've got.
@alexbaerg Жыл бұрын
This is a fantastic video. Something I’ve found in the digital age of home recording studios: I often treat my initial sort of “mix as i go” plug ins while tracking, the way i would treat any outboard gear i would use when I’m tracking in a bigger studio. I don’t have the ability to EQ and Compress many things i would like to on the way in, so I’ll add those two plug ins (or 1 channel strip type plug in) to each of the tracks I’m recording. If I can avoid latency, ill even track with those plug ins on. When i get the take i like, I’ll take those tracks, PRINT THEM DOWN TO NEW TRACKS, and deactivate the initial recording tracks. Leaving me with new, great sounding “raw” tracks with no plugins on them. I basically use those initial tracks as my “outboard gear”. Another good example of this is when i record drums at home… I’m playing drums in a tiny basement, so room mic’s dont sound great. So, i create “room mic’s” in Pro Tools using the UAD Ocean Way plug in, but I PRINT that Aux down to AUDIO and just treat it like i would real room mic’s in a bigger studio when it comes time to mix. One of the things I’ve learned doing this is to actually COMMIT TO SOUNDS I LIKE. I don’t NEED the “freedom” to change and tweak every single sound forever. If I liked it when i recorded it, I’ve learned to trust myself enough to know that that was probably for good reason.
@Robil634 жыл бұрын
This is the most comprehensive yet concise giant slap-in-the-face of sensibility every mixer should watch. Probably the most valuable fundamentals right here. awesome, thankyou.
@Producelikeapro4 жыл бұрын
Thanks ever so much! I'm glad to be able to help!
@RyRyMohr3 жыл бұрын
As a beginning mixer the biggest point I get from this is set levels and panning first. After getting rid of my plugins and do exactly that, it made my mix come together a ton easier.
@IanKellysmusic4 жыл бұрын
IMO, some of your best advice ever in this video. Listen, trust your ears and instincts enough to leave it alone when it doesn't need anything. Thanks mate!
@rogerfurer22734 жыл бұрын
My worst mistake was having everything in at the beginning of the song. Now I wish I had brought the doubled guitar in at the chorus, and the doubled vocal in at the bridge. Maybe waited until the guitar solo to add the extra percussion etc. I always loved the way the Rolling Stones produced "No Expectations". I hope to do better in the future. Thanks for all your tips Warren, they are a big help.
@OrgChromer4 жыл бұрын
Arrangement is an art! I like to start with the climax of the song, and then work backwards to the intro, taking things away as I go. I find it much easier to take things away than to add them in!
@rogerfurer22734 жыл бұрын
@@OrgChromer Yes, that is easier to do now with digital. I was working with 2" 24-track tape, and really had no idea how production values mattered. Whenever I was dissatisfied, I'd add a guitar track. Hopefully I know a little more now.
@ColeMelly4 жыл бұрын
When you figure out what & why was better about your go rough mix, which you will find listening too your 12hr mix, then you really become an engineer." Don't let the profoundity of this simple advice pass you by. This wisdom is so important for any creative to learn. It's something called humility.
@kaylubproductions45173 жыл бұрын
I completely agree with the first tip! I've been in situations where a track has been EQ'd by-the-books and it sounds good but then you bump something up or down a little bit in certain places and it gives it such a richer, fuller sound.
@bobcorrin58864 жыл бұрын
Warren you are so right I have tweaked and fiddled with mixes and thought I CRUSHED it !! Then... played back the original raw recording and found out we lost all of the dynamics. Added too much stuff!!! Great tips Cheers
@Jeremy_Kinsey4 жыл бұрын
ANOTHER CLASSIC! I highly encourage every producer and mixing engineer, to watch this video quarterly or at least a few times per year. Sure, it's information that many of us have been taught, but it's also information that reminds us to keep it simple, less is often more and don't over complicate a mix, if it's unnecessary. EXCELLENT episode!
@DaveStarr100.34 жыл бұрын
This video makes me so HAPPY! especially the segment about don't stereo everything! As an amateur with no formal mixing training but plenty of experience in live orchestral performances (where I worked with the conductor of physically moving sections of instruments around the stage seating to "mix" everything), and as someone who is mostly deaf in my right ear since birth, I'm jumping up and down in my studio and pumping my fist in the air! It's happiness that all of the things I've been feeling and doing for years is being corroborated by a professional of this caliber! 😍🎉
@DaveStarr100.34 жыл бұрын
Oh, and as a trumpet player, I'm quite familiar with dynamism 😂😂
@fabricecavalerie97474 жыл бұрын
Hi Warren. The more I watch your videos, and others from other musicians, mixers, engineers, producers, etc..., (Graham Cochrane, Joe Gilder, Jacquire King, Rick Beato...), The more it makes sense, to me, that, in the end, it's all relied to 3 principles: -The Pareto principle, aka, "the 80/20 rule" (Less is More) -Self confidence. -Doing what's to be done, without any preconceived idea. "Perfection is achieved, not when there is nothing more to add, but when there is nothing left to take away." Antoine De Saint-Exupery Anyway, thanx for all your videos. They are the best teachers I've ever had.
@squoblat4 жыл бұрын
"Mix that you would be happy with" - what is this holy grail you speak of?
@Producelikeapro4 жыл бұрын
I understand! It something we continually strive for!!
@InsideOfMyOwnMind4 жыл бұрын
@@Producelikeapro If you shoot for the stars you might only get to Mars.
@rolojared4 жыл бұрын
Everyone who is starting in the world of music production should watch this video. I think we could add that it's important to work with references. Manny times I found my mix was right when I finished in my room, but when I change the environment of the listening, I could feel a lot of mistakes. So, you could get a better perspective when use references. Greetings from Chile.
@hudson_riffs40884 жыл бұрын
The EQ Analyzer/dipping resonated with me a lot. I know a lot of producer/friends and even tutorials on youtube that will immediately just go in and dip everything because it's what the textbook says, sometimes it's good to break some rules and keep the balls in it.
@stupendousmusic41904 жыл бұрын
BRILLIANT Warren !!! My biggest mistake was and probably still is, not working in shorter time frames, causing me not to take enough breaks. I always start a mix with my Beyerdynamic DT880 Pro headphones and try to balance everything in MONO before I start panning and eq-ing. Bruce Swedien: "Compression is for kids." Armin Steiner does not compress! Glyn Johns does not compress bass guitars. Al Schmitt only tickles the meter as he says, but uses a Tube-Tech SCMC-2B on the mains, but again, only tickling the meter. I only compress if I think there is a need, or if I want the tonal coloration of a particular compressor on something; or maybe for an effect. I do like limiters at times. I never mix into a compressor; but sometimes I'll put one on the mains stereo buss after I'm more or less done with the mix, or to hear how the mix could sound through any given one and with the most minimum ratio possible. I only gain stage if I can't get a track to sit in the mix using the fader. 99% of my tracks are MONO! Very few are stereo. I'm a big fan of plate reverb: Motown, The Four Seasons; etc.-LOVE IT! Chamber sometimes too: Gold Star comes to mind. Usually a stereo effects track set up, and one or to mono ones; vocals sometimes get there own. We're engin-EARS, not engine-EYES!
@Kaotonix4 жыл бұрын
I'm leaving a comment just because I know that helps with the KZbin algorithm and it helps push this video to more people. Because you deserve it. Thank you so much for sharing your knowledge!
@deanmoore72394 жыл бұрын
One big mistake I used to make was simply not learning the plugins I had. By that, I mean getting tons of the latest, greatest plugins and just using them because they were the newest sound or newest effect, so I ended up with so many plugins that I only knew on a surface level instead of just a core few plugins that I knew intimately so could get what I needed much quicker. Hindsight can be so depressing at times...lol. Thank you again Warren, another incredible video, and definitely a case of less is very much more.
@TommyVega4 жыл бұрын
Man, every single word is gold. Thanks for sharing all of these informations for free. Amazing! Big big thanks! But also, you have a big responsibility because you are teaching future mixing and mastering engineers! :D So we trust you as your students :)
@swanpond144 жыл бұрын
Warren you are such an incredible teacher! You present things in their conceptual whole in a way that others sometimes don’t. Thank you for all the amazing content!
@TheRealFreekBos4 жыл бұрын
Good god you are passionate about it. Don't forget to breath every now and then. But... thank you thank you thank you... You are inspiring!
@justam_ess2 жыл бұрын
Always a pleasure listening to your insight. Learned a lot, but also, it's a relief to find that i've been doing SOME things correct! I appreciate you!
@mark-ze4en2 жыл бұрын
Always the BEST advice from Warren,,,, it's not Rocket science it's practical. Still takes experimentation and trial and error ,,, but thinking practically gets 80% of the job done. Your mixes are supreme in clarity and separation while establishing a solid mix. Thanks Warren.
@Producelikeapro2 жыл бұрын
Thanks ever so much! I’m happy to be able to help in any way I can
@FriendGaugeShotgun3 жыл бұрын
This is a great video! I have been recording since the 90s, and I still love to hear this stuff! I recently have been guilty of some of these points!
@Some-Ryan4 жыл бұрын
I really related to the tip about removing plugins on the signal chain. Quite easy to keep stacking effects past the point of improvement. Sometimes it's best to remove everything and start again, especially if you've been tracking and mixing at the same time. Gold.
@SkyeLabMusicGroup4 жыл бұрын
Always trust your ears!!! I'm sure we've all made the mistake of making minute adjustments on an equalizer until the instrument sounded perfect! Then discovered it was in bypass! Lol. (More than once)
@marshallfairbrother76022 жыл бұрын
That happened last week
@DavidRavenMoon4 жыл бұрын
This is all good advice, and at the same time seems so obvious to me. I’m always amazed when I’m in a recording forum and someone asks “what’s the best settings for vocal compression?” I’m always saying “use your ears!” Same with EQ or reverb or whatever. These same people complain that their CPU is overloaded because they have a reverb plug-in on every channel instead of using a bus.
@joeespinosa20304 жыл бұрын
Are those 8 tracks of songs in the key of life? stinkin awesome!
@ultrabounce4 жыл бұрын
on heavy guitars i only use multiband compression when there are palm mutes to tame that area a bit
@Producelikeapro4 жыл бұрын
Fantastic! Great tip!
@ultrabounce4 жыл бұрын
@@Producelikeapro thanks warren.it's very cool to know that someone like you agrees with some of the techniques i use.that's really a confident boost :)
@seymourheron25332 жыл бұрын
Thank you Warren, I picked up some golden nuggets that will help me in mixing. God bless you.
@Producelikeapro2 жыл бұрын
Thanks ever so much
@Producelikeapro2 жыл бұрын
Thanks ever so much
@ColterBergh4 жыл бұрын
I like this guys energy.
@gisellechacon70812 жыл бұрын
What a great lesson! #3 answered a LOT of questions for me about panning, especially managing stereo sources. This whole mix concept really makes sense too. Thanks, Warren!
@dancegod16914 жыл бұрын
Don't "trust your ears" after you've been mixing for longer than like 30 minutes, because they start lying to you. For instance my ears told me to apply dramatic EQ to my master bus, and when I listened a few days later, I realized how bad it sounded. The secret is making a great original recording (w/ a great microphone set-up in a great room) and then not messing with the original recording much. This video is giving extremely useful advice that would have saved me years.
@d-rockanomaly92434 жыл бұрын
A good tip for this, is switch out sound sources to sort of refresh the listening experiences. Sometimes I go back and forth from monitors to headphones, back and forth, and they slowly start meeting towards a middle where they sound equally balanced, and when I get close to here, my mix is usually sounding good.
@shoalsofficial93344 жыл бұрын
Fantastic advice. I'm currently mixing (as an amateur) my bands first song, and I really wish I had someone to listen to it and give me proper nudges in the right directions. However, I've found your videos to be INVALUABLE.
@UncleBenjs4 жыл бұрын
I'll listen to it for you also, I have Prismsound ad/da, and some very nice monitoring. I don't mind making some notes for you on what I hear.
@ErwinS814 жыл бұрын
Give us a link then.. would love to listen to them and pretend I know what I'm talking about when giving advice :p
@shoalsofficial93344 жыл бұрын
I will post a link in a little bit. I appreciate the offers!
@UncleBenjs4 жыл бұрын
@@shoalsofficial9334 Still tweaking? remember don't do too much!
@shoalsofficial93344 жыл бұрын
@@UncleBenjs definitely still tweaking, just getting started really. I dont have any experience or education, I could really use some obvious pointers, major stuff that obviously needs fixed because my ears are nowhere near trained enough yet to grasp it all
@KennedysKitchen4 жыл бұрын
Superb. I've been at this for 30 years, like many of us, when I can, and with what I've had at hand. I am just now confident in what I am hearing, and in my knowledge regarding the tools that I have, that have a clear sense of. Number 4 . . . make it sound simple, and try to get there simply.
@milesnicholas81244 жыл бұрын
Hi Warren, that 's definitely one of your best posts. Very timely advice to hear and spoken about with such passion too. So many of us are trying too hard to get wide mixes using stereo enhancers and triple tracked guitars when often all we really need is strategic panning. Also great to be reminded of spot mono verbs& delays underneath instruments and vocals. Many thanks from Peckham, sarffff London!
@sariabuladel76654 жыл бұрын
This might easily be one of the best and most important videos I've ever seen on the subject. Thank you sir!
@rachelmillson2164 жыл бұрын
Sitting here in sunny Dorset and learning a lot of good stuff. Many thanks.
@corbyvinson11754 жыл бұрын
Yet another great video!! I start with my mixing in mono. Took me a while to get used to it, because it sucks and I didn't like the way sounds. Then I really fell in love with it. I just remixed an old song I did 2 years ago with a friend of mine and I got rid of every single plug in, effect and set all of the faders all the way down, then rebuilt the track all the way up in mono first. All in all, I simplified a lot of stuff and the result was night and day. It was a hell of a lot better than my original mix.
@JeremyRayWilliams114 жыл бұрын
Great Advice!!. I also find putting background vocals to the left or right of the main vocal slightly helps them sound more live.
@EricSkyeMusic4 жыл бұрын
Man, you're a treasure to someone like me just trying to learn about mixing to make my little selfie KZbin vids sound better. Thanks for what you do!
@napynap4 жыл бұрын
I'm in the middle of mixing an album of hawaiian syle acoustic music. Without drums, it's been difficult to make the songs bounce with dynamics. Your techniques are bringing me back to the basics in a genre I haven't mixed before. Thank you.
@MrNightowl19804 жыл бұрын
Just your down to earth way of sharing your thoughts and knowledge helps me alot! Sometimes I think to much instead of taking the time to listen closely what happends in my mix. My biggest enemy is that I think that my mix is finished and the next day I enhance the mix with a suttle cut. However, your way of explaining helps me alot. Thanks so much!
@claudius31244 жыл бұрын
For me, this is one of your best "5 tips" videos. I think you really outdone yourself here. All is clear and make a lot of sense. Having some experience myself I absolutely confirm everything. It's always with great pleasure that I watch your channel. You're an inspiration, even if you're a little younger than me - anyway does it really matter? I don't think so. With your permission I will quote your 5 - I mean 6 - tips in my last Cubase class next week. I think my students will appreciate. Thanks Warren. And, as usual, have a wonderful time... ;-)
@szunabassАй бұрын
200 % agreed.. I've experienced all these aspects for 2 years, this vid confirmed me...
@ProducelikeaproАй бұрын
Thanks ever so much!
@CHayden074 жыл бұрын
Hey Warren! Fantastic video as always. One really basic idea that doesn't get enough emphasis when talking about stereo image, is that "mono" in any multi-speaker set up is the same content (frequency, phase) coming from each speaker equally. Super simple idea, Audio 101 stuff. However, that mindset can get lost on some people when they are forming a stereo image with lots of individual elements. The most classic example of this is the stereo doubled guitar. We've all been there, do the left side, duplicate track, repeat performance, pan right. But because they are simply the same source repeated and panned , you're ONLY getting a phase shift, but you still have similar frequency content that is tugging them toward the middle. You can hear this in action by sticking a Mid/Side EQ on the guitar bus and carving all those fundamental midrange frequencies out of the center, pushing your guitars waaay out to the sides. So with this in mind, to your point about starting a mix with leveling and panning, I'd go one more step: Pull up all of the elements, level them a bit, pan them around etc, get the feel of the different parts and how it should all work together, but then dump the whole thing down to mono and listen to everything on top of each other. If I've got a piano fighting with a guitar for frequency space in the mono field, I focus on the MUSICAL frequencies of each element and do subtle cut/boost on each to emphasize what they're saying musically. That way I know that once I go back to stereo and pan them out, their similar frequency content won't build up and meet in the middle. This gets even better when you use something like the Waves F6, and do these kinds of moves dynamically. 😉
@pipwerks4 жыл бұрын
Such simple advice, but soooo foundational! I'm a long-time viewer, and IMO this is one of your best videos... should be required viewing before jumping into your other videos, esp the ones demoing compression and plugins. Thanks for all you do, Warren.
@Simeonital4 жыл бұрын
I love Vocal Rider which is always my first plugin on vocals. I print the automation then tweak it before applying any compression. Sometimes the compressor is then only used for tone rather than control. Love all your advise Warren. Sound!! Edit: I should add for anyone seeking advice on using Vocal Rider, you should not use one setting for a dynamic vocal performance. Separate the vocal on different tracks according to the dynamics and spend time making sure VR is working well for the whole performance/track, it will save you time tweaking and ultimately compressing
@scottbaxendale3234 жыл бұрын
To me, a heavy distorted guitar track seems already compressed on its own through the distortion pedal which in its very effect is chopping off the transients to create the distortion. Also some of my favorite records from the 60’s have the drums in mono hard panned to one side with the reverb return on the other side. Obviously this was due to track limitations of the day and the fact mono was king and the stereo mix was usually an afterthought, but these records still sound amazing. Some early Hendrix tracks were like this, I think? There is a cluster of British albums recorded in the late 60’s early 70’s that, to me, have the absolute best sounding drums, bass, and acoustic guitars ever on record. These records include: Blind Faith, Traffic- Low Spark and High Heeled Boys, Rod Stewart-Every Picture Tells a Story, John Lennon-Imagine and others, but they all have the best drums, bass and acoustic sounds ever.
@gribb59674 жыл бұрын
"Every Picture tells a Story" should be required listening for any Producer /Engineer. So much is "wrong" from a technical standpoint and yet it sounds fabulous. I love the overblown blown out bass sound and I especially love the drums on this. No one is making records like this any more.
@Producelikeapro4 жыл бұрын
Thanks ever so much Scott for sharing your insight! I really appreciate it!!
@Producelikeapro4 жыл бұрын
@@gribb5967 agreed! Amazing album!!
@scottbaxendale3234 жыл бұрын
Gribb 59 Exactly what I was talking about! That creamy bass sound that doesn’t fight with anything else along with that dry drum sound still gets my juices flowing.
@scottbaxendale3234 жыл бұрын
Gribb 59 “Every Picture Tells A Story” was my senior high school theme song in 1972.
@KlausPercussion2 жыл бұрын
Just love your channel. I have written down and organized the information in chechlists in my OneNote. It helps me so much checking myself during mixing. Also when I don't know how to proceed I can always go back to those and get some quick tips. Thank you so much that you provide all that knowledge for free. Looking forward to record and mix a song with my band!
@McGuire406954 жыл бұрын
Wonderful tips, Warren! I love the tip especially on the stereo effects! As far as Drum overheads, I've found myself always going hard left/right. As far as guitars? That's another story. I'll typically have my two main rhythm guitars (I and II) panned about 55-60% left and 55-60% right for the verses. Typically, in the choruses, there will be two more rhythm tracks (III and IV) panned a bit farther out around 90% let and right, and turned down a bit quieter than the main rhythm guitars. It does add a bit of "clutter," sound wise, by those extra rhythm tracks (only during choruses or bigger outros) flanked towards the outsides and quieter (plus EQ) gets it sounding full. The more I get into mixing, the more I enjoy it. I find myself thinking a lot about numerous ways to get instruments (guitars, vocals, synths, etc) sitting well in the mix. I've noticed that point #4 is the best advice: using panning and gain staging to get everything sitting well on its own. It makes the process of everything else SO much easier. Love the reference of backing sitting around the lead vocals. It's like a harmony line, then the lead would be center, and I'd put the harmonies around 10-20% on either side depending on timbre of vocalist. If it's a choir-like vocal line with "oohs and ahhs," then they go wider, for me.
@iraklismoschonas52144 жыл бұрын
It's the second, third video I watch on your channel and I'm hooked! I love how passionate you are, not to mention that your tips and advice are among the best I've found on KZbin.
@Btvstudio4 жыл бұрын
I love your videos dude. You're a wealth of knowledge.
@milosvukelicofficial48394 жыл бұрын
you are an inexhaustible source of inspiration :) TNX!
@Producelikeapro4 жыл бұрын
Hi MilosVukelic Official thanks ever so much my friend!!
@HeathAllyn4 жыл бұрын
I'm also a HUGE fan of #5. I'd say it's my main guiding principle in pretty much everything. Only apply the minimum force required. I don't tweak unless I think something needs a tweak for a reason. My guitar sound, for example. Start with a guitar and amp choice. Is that all I need? Do I want a pedal or effect for a specific reason? Maybe I decide I want a reverb. I pick a reverb and put it on. Is that enough? Do I *need* to tweak the reverb? Sure there's pre-delay, decay, and possibly many more controls. Do I *need* to touch them or is that default reverb setting just fine the way it is? Sure, sometimes I'll play with things just to experiment and play and maybe discover something, but my general philosophy is minimum amount of required force.
@arronsans4 жыл бұрын
Warren!!! Thank you! I’m only starting out but all of your tutorials are excellent, this one especially - always opening my mind and of course ears! Very grateful! 🤟
@Producelikeapro4 жыл бұрын
Hi Arron! Great to hear!
@MatrixKeys4 жыл бұрын
Produce like a pro is the man, he has inspired me to start my KZbin channel, great content. Ive learned do much him and still learning. Thank you , you'r such an inspiration.
@Producelikeapro4 жыл бұрын
Fantastic! Congratulations on your own KZbin Channel!! Thanks for sharing! I’m so glad to be able to help! Have a marvellous time recording, many thanks Warren
@TheFeelButton4 жыл бұрын
Bonus tip is my favorite. Trust your ears and trust yourself. Growing up I never trusted my instincts in music and it always kept me stagnant. Once I stopped putting others ears and musical opinions on a pedestal I really started becoming one with the soundscapes and started growing musically. Good stuff Warren! Cheers!!
4 жыл бұрын
I love to do (or not do) all those things, but live. Making it work is the most beautiful feeling.
@humbarumba4 жыл бұрын
all of the things you talked about have been my big mistakes, getting into a frenzy of applying plugins to cure excesses of another plugin, ended up sounding flat, boring and unreal in the visceral adrenaline inducing way. Staring at spectrun analyzers, rushing to apply the same settings I set on the last project - without listening to the song, thinking wide all the time instead of placing the sounds in different places or too much ping pong. Over compressing, multiband limiting, too much air, mixing in the wrong room, not referencing. You nailed them all - it was almost like you were reading my mind - or had data about all my bad mixing decisions. Like you had a webcam on me and a load of data. Great content Warren
@stevebadachmusic4 жыл бұрын
i think this is some of the best advice i've ever heard. i learned something similar about amps. just set it however it sounds good, don't get caught up worrying about where the knobs are pointed. maybe the treble has to drop to zero in a certain room for a certain situation. just trust your ears, not a bunch of concepts about what things "should" be.
@KMNixon4 жыл бұрын
Volume automation over Compression is a great suggestion. I will definitely make note of my mixes for volume control with this in mind. Thank you.
@Producelikeapro4 жыл бұрын
Mark Nixon absolutely!! Agreed 100%!!
@ragingchimera80214 жыл бұрын
I had a very dynamic vocal I was trying to control with compression, to get the compression to effectively control the dynamics it was squeezing the life out of the vocal. I finally got frustrated and did volume automation and it worked great... took a bit more time but was well worth it and now I have a better idea of the type of dynamics that I am not going to waste time trying to compress and just go straight to volume automation.
@justyourturn4 жыл бұрын
@@Producelikeapro If I remember, your advice is clip gain where its obviously needed then fader automation for "fine tuning"?
@denisconnolly61052 жыл бұрын
As usual Warren, great advice, I found myself of falling into the trap of using plug-ins just because I had bought them and watched the tutorials. I recently found myself taking them off and trusting the recording, using panning and volume automation instead, I believe my recordings are so much better and organic for that approach, so this video confirms this approach. As a songwriter I never had the patience to learn my DAW (Logic Pro X) in fact I'm still bamboozled by most of it, however I recently decided to learn more about it and of course I'm getting better results for doing so. Your tutorials have been invaluable.
@iqi6164 жыл бұрын
15:02 This is magic! I think this is where my mixes need to improve.
@redoemusic4 жыл бұрын
Thank u my friend Warren for this amazing topic 🥰🥰
@MaidenOfMusic4 жыл бұрын
One thing my mentors always drilled into me was to get the sound I wanted at the source rather than try and fix things in post-production. Getting the right musician, instrument, microphone, microphone position, and good performance in the tracking stage will make your life a lot easier later in mixing.
@sanfordkrones826 ай бұрын
These days I'm mostly Dawless, and what you're saying, actually is working for me. I've already improved by using the "less is more" by not even using a computer. My plug-ins are actual random boxes. And my Tascam model 12 console is a standalone with compression, EQ and reverb. The only thing that I might do is after a mixed down to stereo, I might send the final track through a Daw for some final editing and any volume adjustment. I find it to be a really great way to be close to my music and really capturing the actual sound of my instruments the way they are by not relying on the countless plug-ins and all the EQ options. I know it's not for everyone and sometimes super clean production is really good, but I'll stick with Lofi. So yeah, thanks for the advice and I'll keep watching your videos. Maybe you could do one about Dawless recordings?
@aobaprod99184 жыл бұрын
Excellent reminder! Thanks
@Producelikeapro4 жыл бұрын
Aobaprod thanks ever so much!!
@kimbowen94623 жыл бұрын
wow! incredible stuff. thanks for making me realize that i don’t always need stereo busses for fx returns. i’ve been doing that by rote without questioning it for many years.
@AndredeBruinSoundengineer4 жыл бұрын
Thank you Warren for item 1, eq with your ears and the mind. I'm a live sound engineer for 30 years now. Do a lot of festivals with a nice Midas H2000 analog desk and lots of good outboard like DBX160, Lexicon 300 and Drawmer gear.. Then the youngster turn up, they all ask could you help me? I can't see my eq????? Hahaha. Well done! A
@PalkoChris3 жыл бұрын
You’ve offered so many valuable resources and a legit KZbin education most Universities couldn’t offer. Definitely worth picking up a mix course or two. Thank You Produce Like A Pro Crew. Much Respect. 🔥🤘🔥
@J-DUB-F14 жыл бұрын
Thank you for this........old habits die hard!!.....especially #4. This one point would likely speed up my mix process big time!, and stop me from working in geological time!!. Speaking of Clearmountain,....years ago I mixed a song for a friend and writing partner. Last year she had the opportunity of having a song mixed by Bob. She had been wanting to have that song we did remixed. Listening to my earlier mix and his was very eye opening. Sonicly I expected it to be better....nicer top end sheen, warmer fatter bottom, sweeter midrange.....BUT, the big big change was arrangement. His choices of where to bring in certain gtrs, where to push lead voc dbls, etc....really made me appreciate a fresh perspective with new ideas.
@playamaqui4 жыл бұрын
Thank you, Warren!
@koenwieringa19043 жыл бұрын
Learning so much from these videos. Love them!!
@Producelikeapro3 жыл бұрын
Thanks ever so much
@guitar.knackshack22104 жыл бұрын
Words of wisdom and experience 16:40 "It will tell you what you need to do!" Every single song, instrument performance, vocals, etc. is unique and there's no text book way to mix music the same way every time. my take away from this is listen to the music and it will tell you how to mix it, and every song has a different story to tell. Thanks Warren!
@ridorids4 жыл бұрын
Great Lessons.. Thank you Sir.
@Producelikeapro4 жыл бұрын
Hi Rinaldo! You are welcome!
@bazrico99453 жыл бұрын
Another amazing lesson...everything you say makes perfect sense.