"hotness" is (in the context of mixing) the opposite of "dynamic range". So, your track's average dynamic range (more or less the Root Mean Squared difference from max) is probably in the 4-5 range. 12-14 is considered CD-quality, 10 is quite listenable if you turn it up a little, and you probably want something more like 6-8 for your genre --- you do want it to stand out in the crowd, after all, and louder sounds better up to a point. That point is around DR4, where most commercial EDM tracks land, at which point louder is exhausting or even painful. I run my mp3/wav output through the TT DR Offline Meter 1.4 and target DR 7-9.SoundGoddess wrote:Thanks so much for the feedback. I probably sound like a total n00b but what do you'll mean by "hotness"? I guess I have enough time this month to go back through my EQ and compression tutorials to try to improve the mix a bit. Just been focused mostly on the structure and composition. I'm not sure what to do with the melody exactly, might just be that the genre I picked for the song is a bit loopy. I hadn't considered looking at it from a vocals standpoint.
http://pleasurizemusic.com/es/es/download
Hope that helps!
