Re: Mixing guitar sound
It sounds like there is a TON of reverb on the guitar tracks. It's pushing the guitar way back.
What you're essentially asking about is a general rule for EQing instruments so they can sound cohesive together.
Several things to mention:
1) it is normally better to cut away unwanted frequencies rather than to boost the ones you do want. By cutting the unwanted freq's, it leaves behind the desirable freq's, without making the signal of the track too high and risking clipping.
2) Every kind of instrument has it's own "strong spots" that make that instrument sound like itself. Almost every instrument also produces a lot of other frequencies when mic'd, which, when put together with a bunch of other instruments, can overlap, and create a confused, unfocused sounding mix. You can avoid this by EQing each instrument so that it leaves space for the frequencies produced by other instruments.
3) when you have more than one of the same kind of instrument, if they are playing parts that differ significantly in terms of pitch, you can use the EQ to make them sound distinct, but you can also pan them in opposite directions to create more spread and separate them.
4) There are no hard and fast rules for how to EQ a mix, because a lot of it depends on the kinds of tones you are going for with all the instruments and which frequencies need emphasis relative to each instrument.
5) It is normally better to create a good sounding dry mix (ie no effects at all) first, and then add effects accordingly.
6) You could spend years learning about the technical nitty gritty of the above points, but you should read up a little on how to mix a full rock or blues band (Depending on the kinda music you're working on). And then start experimenting. Practice makes....well, not perfect, but better, at any rate.
This post needs to be engraved on a plaque and put on the wall of every home/project studio. Well done.
I would only add a few other basic things:
7. A good mix starts with a
good performance and a
good arrangement. If you're layering guitar parts, for example, you need each part to have a specific, useful, role, and you need to perform each part with that role in mind. Throwing tracks in just for the fun of it, or just because so-and-so famous band/producer does it like that, will cause you much pain and suffering at mix time.
8. Every time you add a track or an effect, always ask yourself:
"does this really, honestly help the mix?" If the answer is anything other than "100% yes", throw that **** in the trash. When it comes to recording and mixing, the "less is more" mantra is
everything. Trim the fat and your mix will be all the better for it.
9. Reverb doesn't have to be soaking wet, or set to the "airplane hangar" preset to be useful. 99% of the time you actually want the opposite: a decent-sized room dialed in to just below the level you can consciously perceive it. And
always EQ your reverb to make sure it's not too shrill or too boomy. If you really, really, really want strong, noticeable echo,
ALWAYS USE DELAY FOR THAT, NOT REVERB.
10. Compressors are a mix essential, but
don't kill your dynamics with them! Keep the ratios reasonable (I consider anything above 4:1 to be an aggressive comp), set the thresholds to the point where they're only rounding about 3 - 6 db off the peaks, and be very careful with attack and release times. Learn what attack and release settings work best for which instruments (hint: for anything other than drums and percussion, an attack less than 50 ms is probably a bad idea). I could write a whole huge post about using compressors in a mix, so I'll just stop now before I get out of control
