zenmindbeginner
New member
Re: Io, Priestess Impure (black/space metal)
You did a bang up job bro! Keep up the awesome work. Drum mixing is difficult and took me years to learn and I'm still learning. lol. A lot of it hinges on expensive plug-ins applied in the multi tracking layout so each drum gets their individual treatment. In metal drums... one needs to watch that the snare doesn't become too boxy and or muddy, the kick drum has proper treble and midrange, the cymbals are chilled out and the ride and hi hat blend well with the crashes, splashes, chinas etc. and that the toms have sufficient attack and body without becoming overpowering during the fills.
Great ideas and great chops!
Thanks man, that means a lot! The drums I programmed all myself, didn't use any loops or pre-programmed beats. At one point in my life I used to take military snare drum lessons, and eventually taught myself how to play a drum kit too, so I'm familiar enough with how to construct a beat to be able to program stuff. I used the midi sequencer in my DAW coupled with XLN Audio's fantastic Addictive Drums drum sampler for all the samples (with some tweaking in my DAW). They turned out pretty good I think, but not as good as I would've like them...I still got a lot to learn about mixing drums lol
You did a bang up job bro! Keep up the awesome work. Drum mixing is difficult and took me years to learn and I'm still learning. lol. A lot of it hinges on expensive plug-ins applied in the multi tracking layout so each drum gets their individual treatment. In metal drums... one needs to watch that the snare doesn't become too boxy and or muddy, the kick drum has proper treble and midrange, the cymbals are chilled out and the ride and hi hat blend well with the crashes, splashes, chinas etc. and that the toms have sufficient attack and body without becoming overpowering during the fills.
Great ideas and great chops!
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