Re: Mixing guitar sound
I'm sure all of the excellent mixers on this forum (TwilightOdyssey & P.A.Folic are GREAT engineers BTW) will all agree that getting things to sound as loud as possible (playing the volume war) is extremely difficult and something we are all continuing to improve. Personally, it's a constant battle and the part of engineering that I hate with a passion.
Thanks for the kudos, sir!
The 'secret' to mixing is two-fold:
FIRST, how to get everything to 'seat' in next to each other so that it sounds like a sonic jigsaw puzzle wherein all the pieces fit in with such precision that it's hard to imagine it fitting any other way
SECOND, how to maximize each instrument's space within that puzzle, either by pure level or psychoacoustic trickery
I find it very amusing that myself and PAFaholic are mentioned at the same time, as our mixing styles could not be more different; his mixes are, to my ears, more modern and polished than my old-skool approach.
However, I think this hits on a central theme and one that we both utilize in our mixes whether consciously or not: your mix has to have a PURPOSE.
The three Mixing Tenets I live by are:
I. Only one element of the mix can be the loudest at any given time. If you have different elements competing to be the loudest, the only solution is through aggressive compression and that actually makes the mix sound smaller.
II. There has to be a climactic point someplace in the mix that is THE LOUDEST. The rest of the mix works around that point and by definition, should be at least a couple of dB lower so that when it hits the climax, it is both very obvious and has someplace to go; otherwise, we are back to having it get smaller again through brick wall'ing.
III. Learn when to break these Tenets musically.