If you can pick a vocal or a string out of 15 to 20 similar vocals or strings that are all feeding a submix, you have better ears than 99.9999999999999999999999999999999999999999999999999999999999999999999999999999999999999999999999999999999999999999999999999% of pros out there.Lunch Money wrote:No. I'm honestly not. To me, the lines of the meter have absolutely nothing to do with the mix. Frankly, it actually boggles my mind that you would need to see the fader 'line', regardless of sequencer. Why would it matter? You listen to the song and say, "Hmm... seems as though the strings are sitting a bit loud." How can seeing Logic's full-sized faders help you hear a mix better?
What happened to your EARS, man???You don't mix with your eyes!!!!! Honestly, I'm literally baffled at the concept of needing to "see" the fader in order to know where the instrument is sitting in your mix.
I may be talkative, verbose... I may get into debates... but I'm always honest, and I've always admitted when somebody's called me out on something I may not have even been aware of. And I can tell you with absolute certainty that if Tracktion didn't exist and I was using ANY other sequencer, I would still mix according to what my ears tell me.
Oh, and...
Seriously though, when you have dense track counts of similar level it can be a total bitch to isolate specific problems. Seeing levels on the mixer is like the only way I know of. You don't use them to determine how loud something is, you use them to see relative difference.
I can easily hear that there is a problem, finding the offending track in a project list can be a total drag.
