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Hi KVR,I’m building Reverie Mix, a browser-based ear training app for producers and audio engineers: https://reveriemix.com (https://reveriemix.com)
It’s a web app, not a plugin. There’s a free tier, and an optional paid pro tier.
The focus is mix ear training, not musical ear training. So not intervals, chords, sight singing, etc. It’s about hearing things like EQ, compression, stereo width, phase, high-pass filtering, loudness, etc.
I built it because a lot of mixing advice comes down to “use your ears,” which is true but not very useful by itself. If someone can’t hear what a compressor attack setting is doing yet, telling them to use their ears doesn’t give them a way to practice.
Current exercises:
1. EQ boost frequency identification
2. Compression attack
3. Compression release
4. Stereo width
5. Phase / comb filtering
6. High-pass cutoff matching
7. Loudness matching
The thing I’m trying to get right is controlled practice: short rounds, clear A/B comparisons, level matching where it matters, and feedback after each answer.
I’m mainly interested in whether this kind of controlled practice feels useful to people here, and which exercises feel artificial or badly calibrated.
I’m the developer, so feel free to be blunt. I’d rather hear “this exercise is pointless” now than spend months polishing the wrong thing.
Link: https://reveriemix.com (https://reveriemix.com)