Okay, now you're talking about using equipment that I am just not that good with yet and I'm sure it shows because yes, I do have EQ on everything and checked my levels the best I could. I don't know how to actually look at everything that's playing at one time and pick out the track that's out of place. I wouldn't even know what to look for.ontrackp wrote:Wag -- re: mixing, while having good ears and accurate monitors are important, using your meters is also really important and can help make your sound more polished. Before everyone flips out, I'm not saying you can make a good mix if you're deaf and only watch the meters, but along with listening, you have to watch the relative levels of your tracks, solo your tracks and use dynamic compression and EQ appropriately, and keep an eye on a frequency analyzer looking at your full mix, you will clearly see if something is jumping out, or if an important part is not registering where it should. Trust me, at 59 yrs old my hearing is not what it used to be but I try to be careful and compensate where I can and I think my mixes are ok.
So yes, THIS is one area where I desperately need training, music production, mixing, whatever you want to call it. I did take a course online. I thought it would be better than it was but it wasn't. Essentially they said, "This is an EQ. This is what it does." But they didn't really get into cleaning up mixes or anything like that. It was very basic stuff that was very little help to me.
So telling me to look at meters and whatever doesn't help me because I don't know what to look at. I do everything by ear which, or me, is just begging for disaster.
I need to go to a professional mixing school (if such an animal exists) and learn the whole thing. Unfortunately, that also costs a lot of money that I don't have. I'd love to get an internship at a local studio if I could but there are none in my area.
In short, I need training. I can't do this on my own.
