
SIX COMMON MISTAKES TO AVOID WHEN MIXING RECORDS
A great mix is like eating rich vanilla ice cream added to a warm triple fudge brownie. It’s the perfect combination of elements and textures, almost everybody loves it and it delivers incredible taste. A great mix can turn a great vocal performance into a “star vocal performance” and pull you right as you listen into a song with impact and emotion. What it can’t do is save a bad song or bad performance.
Most people won’t know why but a powerful mix will bring a
recording
alive. It’s where the real “magic”
takes place. Good mixing requires
carving off a little fat here, adding some flavor there, maybe some salt or
pepper, similar to the way a master chef takes the ingredients on the table and
whips up a masterpiece. Put simply, good mixing is all about making your song
work and turning your “static” tracks into a vision.
I have identified six common mistakes that an inexperienced
artist or producer can make when setting out to mix their work.
1. THEY
LOSE THE “BIG PICTURE”
Sure it’s fun to play with the latest plug-in and now that
many mixes happen from one’s laptop, time in the saddle and cost are no longer
a factor. But great mixing is more than tweaking compressors, equalizers,
effects, and hosts of other plug-ins to make cool sounds. It takes vision. It's
like setting a stage. You have to have the props, the lighting, and the sound,
which you need to combine in an optimal manner at just the right moment, in
order for the performances of the actors on the stage to come to life. Stay
focused on the end run…the “big picture”. Don’t get lost in the process.
2. THEY
WORK BACKWARDS FROM THE BOTTOM UP
One of the bug hurdles facing the inexperienced mixer is to
understand exactly how to balance the track around the vocal and how to get it
working optimally with the rest of the instruments. I am continually surprised by the fact that the vocal is the
most important element of a record, yet many times it’s last thing added to the
mix, making it have the feel of a “late guest” who arrives at the end of the
night after the party’s just about over. This to me is working backwards.
Rather than addressing the vocal at the end of the mix process, I think you
should start with it. By building your mix from the vocal down instead
of from the bottom up you will be shaping your production around your
most important asset….isn’t it what you’re selling…the artist?
3.
THEY DON’T UNDERSTAND BALANCE – Although mixing seems
quite easy, it’s not. It takes
years to accomplish and music never reach the lofty heights of sonic.
Nirvana. But remember, just like
getting proper sounds is more than playing with plug-ins, mixing is also a lot
more than merely pushing up faders.
Once you have the vocal right (eq and effects), the next step
is to add in your basic track (drums, bass, guitar and or keys). At this point,
the track and the vocal must work together in unity before
anything else is added. In fact, if your basic track and vocal aren’t working
together now, I don’t think anything else you can add can ever change the fact
that your foundation is weak and could collapse at any moment. Fashioned correctly, you create what I
refer to as a “shell” which becomes fixed within itself. Remember, your record
may not have all of its final colors at this point, but it should play out by
hearing only the vocal and basic track with nothing else needed to get your
point across. Then and only then it becomes possible to drop and place your
other instruments and vocals into that shell and know what their proper
balance, EQ, stereo positioning, and optimal front wall to back wall effects
should be. Hint: If you get a strong shell that moves properly within itself,
the rest of the instrument placement and balance is like painting by numbers.
It has to work within the confines of your shell or it’s out of the mix.
4.
THEY DON’T HAVE A WORKING KNOWLEDGE OF EQ AND HOW IT CAN MAKE OR BREAK THE ELEMENTS
OF THE MIX.
As well as balance and positioning, EQ is another important
element which is many times is misunderstood and not fully maximized. Certain
instruments by nature have similar problem frequencies that can compound
quickly, tearing away at the clarity of your mix. Case in point could be an
overly boomy bass and guitar track that build up similar frequencies in the low
to mid bottom range and virtually “cover up“ many of other elements of the
track. The temptation here is to
merely turn up the volume on the tracks that are being compromised but that’s
not the answer. Learning how to carve out the problem frequencies will allow
everything to have it’s perfect place in the picture and will add greatly to
the clarity of your mix, allowing for more detail and transparency. Remember,
elements that are to bright can be annoying and hard to get to blend together
and those that are to dull are hard to hear and feel in relation to other
elements in the track.
5.
THEY TEND TO “OVERUSE” COMPRESSION
Without question a great compressor is a wonderful tool but used
incorrectly in the recording of a track or more importantly on a stereo mix
buss can create massive destruction, which is virtually impossible to correct
later. Here is where plug-ins do come in very handy. The fact is that as you
continue to add instruments and vocals to your production, the demand for and
kind of compression needed will change as add each element. So…always try and
leave your options open. You should only monitor your compression and try and
never commit to it until you have to. (the same is true with EQ). No doubt,
using a compressor on your 2-track buss can add detail, transparency and
dynamic excitement. But, if your lucky enough to have your record
professionally mastered, resist the temptation of premastering yourself in the
mix stage and leave it to the mastering engineer who will have much better and
more sophisticated equipment to get the job done as well as a fresh perspective
on how to use it. If you can swing
the costs – let the “masters” do the “mastering”. It’s worth it.
6.
THEY DON’T LISTEN ON ACCURATE MONITORING SYSTEMS
Many times, they depend on monitors that are not reflective
of what the true sound is that is being captured. Even worse are “hyped”
speakers, which can be really fun to listen to. It’s critical that you are
reproducing what you’re actually hearing in your stereo mix. Speakers don’t
have to cost an arm and leg to be adequate. I’ve heard really expensive
speakers sound horrible. Expensive or not, they all have their own
idiosyncrasies anyway. The trick here is to know your monitors well and know
what a good balanced mix should sound like on them. It is extremely important to continually compare and “A” “B”
your work to other great sounding records in your room and on your speakers.
Besides today most people will listen to your records on inexpensive iPod headphones
or car stereos. Be sure that you check your work on those systems in order to
see if it still stands up.