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Mixing in the analogue domain -- blogging about my experiences

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  • Mixing in the analogue domain -- blogging about my experiences

    Started mixing side 2 of my upcoming album and am documenting the process on my Facebook and Wordpress pages. Feel free to take a gander.



    Why don't you take your little Cobra Kais and get outta here?!
    My collaborative PROGRESSIVE ROCK PROJECT, As Follows.

  • #2
    Re: Mixing in the analogue domain -- blogging about my experiences

    Been there, done that, wove the cloth, hand-sewed and silk-screened the T-shirt, beat it down by the river with a rock when it got dirty.

    Try bouncing tracks between 2 ghettoblasters... or using your dad's mics in the living room, and having until he gets home to get a good vocal track with no mistakes.
    (BTW, no punch-ins.)
    sigpic
    "Add about a half-a-teacup o' bass...."
    --'King' Curtis Ousley

    Visit me on Facebook
    Originally posted by Lewguitar
    In our heart of hearts we're love. That's who we really are.

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    • #3
      Re: Mixing in the analogue domain -- blogging about my experiences

      That was how I started, exactly!
      Recording into a boom box and then bouncing from deck A to deck B whilst playing life. I did that for 2 years when my cousin hipped me to the idea of 4 track. Got a Porta 02 and never looked back!
      Why don't you take your little Cobra Kais and get outta here?!
      My collaborative PROGRESSIVE ROCK PROJECT, As Follows.

      Comment


      • #4
        Re: Mixing in the analogue domain -- blogging about my experiences

        ^Oh, yeah. The Sanyo and the Panasonic box radios always had AGC (automatic gain control, a super-squishy limiter). Drums were OK, but vocals sounded like butt.

        I was also using an old Concord (importer of private-label mid-60s Japanese electronics) stereo open-reel, with the left channel blown out.

        Any-hoo... great blog! Got any tracks from the album?
        sigpic
        "Add about a half-a-teacup o' bass...."
        --'King' Curtis Ousley

        Visit me on Facebook
        Originally posted by Lewguitar
        In our heart of hearts we're love. That's who we really are.

        Comment


        • #5
          Re: Mixing in the analogue domain -- blogging about my experiences

          Thanks! And, yes ... this thread has more detail ... https://forum.seymourduncan.com/show...nal-mix-master
          Why don't you take your little Cobra Kais and get outta here?!
          My collaborative PROGRESSIVE ROCK PROJECT, As Follows.

          Comment


          • #6
            Re: Mixing in the analogue domain -- blogging about my experiences

            Analogue mixing is lovely. Great blog man.

            Damn time / efficiency man. It keeps me working in-the-box. I used analogue stuff before but recalling made me mad. One band came mixing one song in the afternoon, an another one came in the evening mixing an another song with total different setup, next day morning came a third and in the afternoon came the first band and so on... Aaargh.

            I ended up sunk in recall hell and nothing sounded exactly like yesterday. I gave up and started keeping mixes in the digital domain with analogue final stage occassionally. It brought much better efficiency and consistency to me. But analogue mixing is fun and it is what things should be.
            Wackor
            Ørdøg
            NecroPolo
            Diabolus in Musica
            SIDrip Alliance
            Book of Shadows
            RKH

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            • #7
              Re: Mixing in the analogue domain -- blogging about my experiences

              Thanks, man!

              When I do freelance work, I mix ITB; it's way too complex to mix in analog with someone else's stuff, and some people are so used to digital mixes they are like, 'what is that hiss?!'? Er, you mean that bit of noise you can barely hear at the head and tail? That's the self noise of all the analog gear ... ... I think they want 'analog' without it being analog lol. So I strap a Kramer Master Tape across the master buss and turn the noise all the way down. =p

              For my own stuff, I can invest the additional 20 hours it takes to get a good take in analog; I have no recall and don't comp mixes so, if I make a mistake ... it's back to the beginning. It wouldn't bother me at all if my songs were of normal length, but when you are 14 minutes into a 17 minute long track and make a mistake -- it's enough to make you wanna kick something lol
              Why don't you take your little Cobra Kais and get outta here?!
              My collaborative PROGRESSIVE ROCK PROJECT, As Follows.

              Comment


              • #8
                Re: Mixing in the analogue domain -- blogging about my experiences

                Originally posted by TwilightOdyssey View Post
                When I do freelance work, I mix ITB; it's way too complex to mix in analog with someone else's stuff, and some people are so used to digital mixes they are like, 'what is that hiss?!'? Er, you mean that bit of noise you can barely hear at the head and tail? That's the self noise of all the analog gear ... ... I think they want 'analog' without it being analog lol. So I strap a Kramer Master Tape across the master buss and turn the noise all the way down. =p
                Very true man I can remember a picky client who rejected an analogue mix as it had low quality (it was okay just, well, organic with a tiny noise around the head and tail) and accepted a full digital when I sent him a mix online, then rejected the very same mix at the moment when he saw in the studio that all the analogue gear was bypassed. Then he accepted the very same mix when I accidentally routed the mix to the outboard units (meters waving, LEDs flashing - showtime baby!) without returning it to the DAW and the monitors, just for some sort of blind test. 'okay now that sounds excellent' he said. I almost failed to keep my laughing when I realised that the outboard is completely bypassed. Well, I told him to set the ratio of the (bypassed) compressor to the sweet spot. He found it between around ratio 2.0:1 and 2.1:1 and he swore that it is good there without noise and absolutely wrong here with noise and it needed that little bit of change... while the whole unit was out of the chain. So what could I do? I admitted he was right and finalised the track in an hour then finished the project. Misleading? Sure. Evil? Maybe. But man that was the 33th master mix version and it was already complete and ready to release around the 3rd mix by all means

                Human psychology is a weird thing man.
                Wackor
                Ørdøg
                NecroPolo
                Diabolus in Musica
                SIDrip Alliance
                Book of Shadows
                RKH

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                • #9
                  Re: Mixing in the analogue domain -- blogging about my experiences

                  Ha! Great story ...
                  Why don't you take your little Cobra Kais and get outta here?!
                  My collaborative PROGRESSIVE ROCK PROJECT, As Follows.

                  Comment


                  • #10
                    Re: Mixing in the analogue domain -- blogging about my experiences

                    Just a quick bump/update to let those who are interested know that I have posted 4 articles on the subject of mixing in analog thus far, with another going up tonight or tomorrow. Subjects covered thus far:

                    1/Basic connections
                    2/Calibrating the mixing desk
                    3/Mixing with real-time effects
                    4/Mixing vs summing

                    The next article will be about overall level in the final mix.
                    Why don't you take your little Cobra Kais and get outta here?!
                    My collaborative PROGRESSIVE ROCK PROJECT, As Follows.

                    Comment

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