Ways to clean the mix except EQ and removing tracks

Discussion in 'Working with Sound' started by samsome, Jan 8, 2022.

  1. samsome

    samsome Guest

    Any more ways to clean the mix except EQ and removing tracks

    thanks
     
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  3. vuldegger

    vuldegger Producer

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    this is the way.
     
  4. Baxter

    Baxter Audiosexual

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    Filters.

    Define "clean the mix". Are you asking about the many ways to improve a mix (dynamically, timbrally, psychoacoustically, etc)...or just avoiding overlapping/masking (which you do mostly in composition and instrumentation)?
     
    Last edited: Jan 8, 2022
  5. Hazen

    Hazen Rock Star

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    EQ / filtering and removing tracks can be important. Additionally: panning stuff. For example: two instruments playing roughly in the same frequency range - pan one instrument to the left, the other to the right and suddenly both become more discernible / present (at least if you / your listeners have a proper stereo setup).

    Another aspect: during composition make sure that you don't have tons of instruments playing stuff at the same time (unless you are deliberately going for a "wall of sound" paradigm, but even then there is a right and wrong way to do it). Leave space, delete individual notes if too much is going on at the same time. During composition and arrangement you can already make sure that there is room for each instruments performance, that way you need much less intervention with EQ / filter and mixing tools. Don't just keep adding stuff to a loop and be surprised once it becomes a hardly discernible mess.

    Go from the material you have in the loop to an arrangement that grants each element a space within the context of the whole song. Depending on the type of music you make listen to the relevant artists and carefully analyse their arrangements. What's going on, which elements are added or taken away at which moments, which functions do they serve. It's a good idea to take notes.
     
    Last edited: Jan 8, 2022
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  6. clone

    clone Audiosexual

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    Compression.
     
  7. BEAT16

    BEAT16 Audiosexual

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  8. sirwicked33

    sirwicked33 Member

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    the key is basically resonance. everything under 1k is consindered mud. using tools like smoothoperator or spliteq can help to clean up. especially spliteq offers good options.
     
  9. samsome

    samsome Guest

    masking!
     
  10. samsome

    samsome Guest

    can u explain what spliteq and smoothoperator do exactly thanks!
     
  11. samsome

    samsome Guest

    also sidechain
     
  12. Doctor_Me

    Doctor_Me Platinum Record

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    Agree, compression, if well used can really makes things sound tighter and helps them to sit in the right spot in the mix. Therefore opening space for other instruments. There's not a magical setting here, it's really material dependent and you'll need to develop your ears, but a good starting point would be trying to get the upfront intruments more "snappy" and taming down the transients of the background instruments.
     
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  13. BEAT16

    BEAT16 Audiosexual

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  14. bobdule

    bobdule Rock Star

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    check maximalsound.com
     
  15. dondada

    dondada Audiosexual

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    i think you read that wrong, at least i hope:cool:

    the Most important tool in Mixing is Volume!
    everything else is Musical* or Problem Solving*
    Like Clashing Bass and Kick, differnt phrasing* or *sidechain should help
    then Automation, again of Volume and and FX
     
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  16. fuad

    fuad Producer

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    All the answers posted are helpful. But the real key to anything production is balance.
    It's key to getting a clean mix, it's key to getting a big sounding mix, it's key to getting the sound you want.

    Volume balance is the first and most important step to getting a clean mix. I've seen it so many times where people reach for an EQ and start messing with sounds when all they needed to do was turn something up or down in volume.

    So that is the first and most important step to a clean mix. Nothing should be competing. If something is overpowering something else, turn it down first, THEN decide if it needs EQ, compression or anything else.

    Also another super helpful thing to do is to use reference tracks, which are basically tracks made by other people that you think sound good and are similar to yours. Use them, analyze them, learn from them, then apply what you learn to your own tracks. It's one of the most powerful things you can do to get better mixes.

    I have an entire free course dedicated just to doing that
    https://beat-tweaks.com/how-to-analyze-reference-tracks/

    Once you're done going through that, watch this video and this video, they go through the basics of balancing volumes.

    Hope that helps
     
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  17. lxfsn

    lxfsn Platinum Record

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    That would be my second priority.

    Many timbres simply don't match, regardless of the processing involved. So first and foremost is always the sound palette. And this comes to the taste of the artist. And taste is not something that can be easily learned, and definitely other people can't teach taste to other people. At best, other gifted people can show their taste (through their work) and who is able to discern, will discern and learn.

    OP is struggling with basic stuff since half a decade just because is always trying to find tricks, shortcuts and anything else but actually putting in the work :guru:
     
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  18. Greedybuddha

    Greedybuddha Member

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    Gates and transient designers working on the sustain
     
  19. anissbenthami

    anissbenthami Kapellmeister

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    Toilet paper
     
  20. Direct drive

    Direct drive Producer

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    Mud/freq will always show its face! so try bringing things that dont conflict! different timing of the way the vocals/samples/vst comes in...its is ok throwing the kitchen sink at it! but it has to work!
     
  21. waverider

    waverider Rock Star

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    This is such a cool concept! Thank you.
     
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