This was in Bargain Center, 50% off and some of the best mixing videos available:
From the Newsletter - Its a half price special on all the great mixing
videos:
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Hello All!
Its spring again and to celebrate we are offering a %50 off for all our
Newsletter Subscribers.
Simply use the code, "spring" at checkout to save %50 on our entire
catalog including bundles.
Here are some great videos to get you started:
Advanced Compression Techniques Simplified
http://recordingschool.biz/homerecordin ... p-106.html
Layering Reverb/Advanced Analog
http://recordingschool.biz/homerecordin ... p-107.html
VOCALS
http://recordingschool.biz/homerecordin ... p-104.html
DRUMS
http://recordingschool.biz/homerecordin ... -p-92.html
GUITAR
http://recordingschool.biz/homerecordin ... p-101.html
EQUALIZERS
http://recordingschool.biz/homerecordin ... p-102.html
SYNTHS
http://recordingschool.biz/homerecordin ... -p-75.html
BEGINNERS
http://recordingschool.biz/homerecordin ... p-100.html
Thank you and enjoy!
KNOWLEDGE IS POWER
Best Video Tutorials Company/Video Maker ?
- KVRAF
- 14932 posts since 13 Nov, 2012
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- KVRist
- 71 posts since 23 Apr, 2014 from Denver
Another endorsement of dancemusicproduction here.
The bad things first - they are pricey compared to other tutorials, a bit long at times, and they promote using expensive plug-ins (SoundToys, Flux, etc) and on a couple occasions outbound gear as pretty much the only way to get professional quality sounds. I know this is a totally different debate - but obviously people have made professional quality music with all kinds of plugins - free, cheap, and super expensive.
The tuts (fundamental and genre series) aren't software specific for the most part, although they are done in Logic 9 - but rather production focused. For me watching how someone builds a track from scratch, techniques for mixing and using FX, synthesis ideas, songwriting/music theory stuff, anddifferent workflow processes was invaluable. As opposed to many other tutorials, which are one-shots of a interesting topic, I felt that these covered the whole process from start to finish - which was extremely helpful for me. These tutorials are awesome and have great re usability - i've watched a few of them several times and learn something new everytime.
The bad things first - they are pricey compared to other tutorials, a bit long at times, and they promote using expensive plug-ins (SoundToys, Flux, etc) and on a couple occasions outbound gear as pretty much the only way to get professional quality sounds. I know this is a totally different debate - but obviously people have made professional quality music with all kinds of plugins - free, cheap, and super expensive.
The tuts (fundamental and genre series) aren't software specific for the most part, although they are done in Logic 9 - but rather production focused. For me watching how someone builds a track from scratch, techniques for mixing and using FX, synthesis ideas, songwriting/music theory stuff, anddifferent workflow processes was invaluable. As opposed to many other tutorials, which are one-shots of a interesting topic, I felt that these covered the whole process from start to finish - which was extremely helpful for me. These tutorials are awesome and have great re usability - i've watched a few of them several times and learn something new everytime.
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- KVRist
- 39 posts since 28 Mar, 2011
Cool thread!
I'm a big fan of Groove3. Kenny Gioia is awesome. Puremix is great, also. I'll probably check out some of the others mentioned here, thanks
If anyone is interested in a tutorial on Nebula, checkout http://learndigitalaudio.com/. There's a link to a course for Nebula that is really, really fantastic.
I'm a big fan of Groove3. Kenny Gioia is awesome. Puremix is great, also. I'll probably check out some of the others mentioned here, thanks
If anyone is interested in a tutorial on Nebula, checkout http://learndigitalaudio.com/. There's a link to a course for Nebula that is really, really fantastic.