How to get LOUD MIXES!

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  • čas přidán 16. 07. 2020
  • ➡️➡️Click here to learn more about how to get louder mixes: producelikeapro.com/blog/how-...
    ➡️➡️Today's FAQ Friday questions:
    ➡️How do mixing and mastering engineers get productions so loud? 1:13
    ➡️How do you use a limiter? 8:47
    ➡️Do you have any tips for making your mix translate from headphones to speakers? 14:41
    ❤️My Favorite Plugins:
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    ➡️Renaissance Vox: waves.7eer.net/c/1205870/2868...
    ➡️Renaissance Compressor: waves.7eer.net/c/1205870/2868...
    ➡️Warren Huart IR Pack lancasteraudio.com/shop/ir-pa...
    ➡️Warren Huart Kemper Pack lancasteraudio.com/shop/kempe...
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    ➡️Stealth Sonics: stealthsonics.com/?aff=3
    ➡️UK Sound 1173: vintageking.com/uk-sound-1173...
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Komentáře • 447

  • @Producelikeapro
    @Producelikeapro  Před 4 lety +26

    Leave your FAQ Friday questions below!

    • @gilbertspader7974
      @gilbertspader7974 Před 4 lety +2

      I have a question on PA . I have a Peavey 100 watt bass amp which does a good job playing with drum and guitar in classic metal band . What size PA do need to get so I can sing with all the instruments??? The guitarist has a JCM 800 and 2 x 12 cab .

    • @michaeltablet8577
      @michaeltablet8577 Před 4 lety

      Love to hear you play. Do you have any videos of you playing live with a band? Would be really great.

    • @michaeltablet8577
      @michaeltablet8577 Před 4 lety +1

      @@gilbertspader7974 call or go online and takk to the friendly folks at Sweetwater and tell them what you are doing and they will fix you up without selling you things you don't need.

    • @RonnieVaiArovo
      @RonnieVaiArovo Před 4 lety

      What is sidechaining? and in what way do you like to use a sidechain function to acheive a mixing or mastering goal?

    • @gilbertspader7974
      @gilbertspader7974 Před 4 lety

      michael tablet Thank You !

  • @aeloh6921
    @aeloh6921 Před 4 lety +121

    The way I get things loud is by focusing my attention on the highest peaking transients in the track. Once identified, I will (depending on context) Compress, Limit, Saturate, Distort or even clip them. This will make them sound so loud relative to their peak DBFS value, that you will be able to turn them down significantly without them sounding any quieter. No longer are these short transient peaks eating up all your headroom. Now, when everything hits the mix bus compressor, it will be reacting more evenly to all your elements, rather than just being triggered by the highest peaking transients.
    Also, sustained sounds sound subjectively louder than shorter sounds do with levels being equal (In general) so, you can alter the envelope of your transients using dynamic processing in order to make them appear louder. It's all about the attack and release time on compressors. Be careful not to totally lose the snappiness and impact of your drums with this technique though... It's a bit of a balancing act. NY compression can be useful to strike this balance sometimes.
    And finally, look up fletcher munson equal loudness contours if you want to understand how to EQ for loudness. Be careful though, things can easily get harsh and unmusical when EQing with such loudness contours in mind. Oh, and beware of phase shift cased by your EQing, sometimes making EQ moves that should make a sound appear subjectively louder relative to it's peak DBFS value can backfire due to the EQ induced phase shift altering it's peak value. You can sometimes use linear phase EQ to get around this but be aware that Linear Phase EQ can cause artifacts like pre-ringing and transient smearing. Not always a problem though, just keep your ears open and you''ll be all good.
    Sorry for super long post got carried away lol 😅

    • @Willigrow
      @Willigrow Před 4 lety +7

      Great suggestions. Saturation became a big part of my mixes in the recent years. Not a lot of people talk about that... you can make for example snare (an element that usually pumps the master compressor and limiter the most) sound even louder and bigger with a bit of saturation, while reducing the peaks by 3 or more dB.

    • @iampedrorafael
      @iampedrorafael Před 4 lety +2

      Great comment! When I was first starting out I used to get my transients so loud compared to the "tail" that when they got to the stereo bus the song needed 6dB of limiting to get loud :') and suddenly my snare was gone.
      What I found that helps a lot is to do lots of frequency carving, that keeps me from hitting my stereo bus with undesirable information.

    • @aeloh6921
      @aeloh6921 Před 3 lety +1

      @@Astro-rh7uz It depends, what would you like to discuss?

    • @auxorion
      @auxorion Před 2 lety

      The peak reduction, with saturation, move is a very important one.
      Another, for me, that has had a big impact is having a very controlled sub-bass region - by HPF all the sub out of most tracks except kick and bass. Then side-chaining the bass from the kick (all below like 150hz). Sub bass is one of the biggest killers to loudness. (because we mostly can't hear it)

    • @prodsunss
      @prodsunss Před 2 lety

      @@auxorion what saturation plugins would you guys recommend to achieve this?

  • @LasseHuhtala
    @LasseHuhtala Před 4 lety +15

    It's hard enough making one song sound comfortably loud, but making an entire album and making all the songs on that album approximately equally loud, man, that is the 5000 piece puzzle.

  • @mentorlatifi6221
    @mentorlatifi6221 Před 4 lety +98

    How can you give dislikes to the man like him...a king for his job

    • @gordonfreeman9368
      @gordonfreeman9368 Před 4 lety +7

      1.1k vs 9. Almost no dislikes.

    • @Producelikeapro
      @Producelikeapro  Před 4 lety +12

      You're very kind Menki! I am just standing on the shoulders of the giants that came before us!

    • @Producelikeapro
      @Producelikeapro  Před 4 lety +6

      @@gordonfreeman9368 thanks ever so much!

    • @MrZhx
      @MrZhx Před 4 lety +4

      I guess there's people who expected answers like: set first knob to 6 and second to 11, and you have the loudest mix...

    • @davelordy
      @davelordy Před 4 lety

      Its odd, I've always thought he had a bit of middle-ages-king type head, very English, there just something about it that would suit a crown, maybe it's the hair, regardless he needs to get himself a crown.

  • @VaughnGeorge
    @VaughnGeorge Před 4 lety +33

    Who clicks "dislike" on these videos ?? Warren, thank you for giving us so much !! You rock man !! VG:-)

  • @davelordy
    @davelordy Před 4 lety +25

    My mastering chain:
    1) 2 bottles of Pinot Noir.
    2) 18dB of gain reduction.
    3) Monster Munch.

  • @revolutronic
    @revolutronic Před 4 lety +30

    i´m not superloud but i got louder over the years. biggest help for me was correct gain staging, learning about and adding hamonics, eliminating high energy frequencies (esp. bass) and knowing about fletcher munson

  • @RC32Smiths01
    @RC32Smiths01 Před 4 lety +3

    It's so great to see this come back! It has been an awesome week here of course! I am excited to see this one!

  • @hobbesesq.8841
    @hobbesesq.8841 Před 4 lety

    Thanks again Warren. It’s an amazing service you are performing for this community.

  • @petemusgrove7422
    @petemusgrove7422 Před 4 lety +8

    An eye-opener for me was when I received stems that had already been processed such that each of them had a small crest factor - that mix needed only some eq-ing and level-riding, and it was one of the easiest and best-sounding mixes I've ever completed. Nearly all of those stems looked like long rectangles! That experience suggests strongly to me that there's a lot more compression and/or limiting needed on individual tracks than I'd imagined, which I think is what you're basically saying. Thanks again for another great video :-)

  • @hatusage
    @hatusage Před 4 lety

    Thank you Warren. I just found your channel last week and have learnt more about producing/mixing in that time than in the last 2 years of scouring CZcams for information.
    You Rock!

  • @oledahl.
    @oledahl. Před 4 lety +1

    Thanks for a really fantastically informative video. This was one of the better videos I've ever seen. Great explanations coupled with real examples! 🙏🙏🙏❤️❤️❤️

  • @stevencenker6437
    @stevencenker6437 Před rokem

    Thanks Warren, this video is EXACTLY what I needed to know!!! Cheers!

  • @larrydavis3573
    @larrydavis3573 Před 2 lety

    Warren, just now going through your videos recently and while I have been at this for years, I have a lot to learn, and I think watching your tutorials will be very helpful to me to finally get my mixes where they need to be and while I know this CZcams channel is part of your livelihood, I feel your heart is in the right place regardless. Thanks for the lessons!!

  • @sebastianwr719
    @sebastianwr719 Před 4 lety

    Thanks a lot Warren for all your videos! There's always something to learn and I love your anecdotes

  • @scarletiv5683
    @scarletiv5683 Před 3 lety +2

    Warren, I would just like to say, that this video contains possibly the greatest mixing advice I've ever heard. Makes complete sense the way you talk about it. You've answered some of my biggest questions and frustrations. Now I have the knowledge to get my music sounding better. Thank you very much from a grateful subscriber!

  • @acommon
    @acommon Před 4 lety +4

    Wow! This is everything you need to know about mixing all in one video 😮

  • @FrenchtownMedia
    @FrenchtownMedia Před 4 lety

    It is amazing to have your expert insight, thank you! I know I would be lost without this channel!!!

  • @davidallenhammond2777
    @davidallenhammond2777 Před 4 lety

    Great questions folks, great answers Warren. Thank you!

  • @mickimarbhmusic
    @mickimarbhmusic Před 3 lety

    That was very helpful, Warren, as always...sunny greetings from Hamburg 👋😎

  • @AdamHumburg
    @AdamHumburg Před 4 lety

    There is so much useful info in this video. Glueing. Wonderful stuff. Wonderful “road sign” type of stuff to listen for when I’m mixing. The crossover view of things really helped me to see how to high/low pass stuff. Also the serial and parallel compression stuff is super good. I know it’s basics, but THANK YOU for giving me things to use and -listen- for when I mix. Genius. Thank you Warren.

  • @MichaelSandsWildDeuce
    @MichaelSandsWildDeuce Před 3 lety

    I LOVE your videos, Brother. Learning so much. A lot of it is over my head, but that’s ok. If I even get a fraction of what you are throwing, I believe it’s improving my process❤️

  • @curtisbuettner1932
    @curtisbuettner1932 Před 2 lety

    Omg thank you. I truly feel thankfulness in my heart, this is exactly what I needed!

  • @michaeltablet8577
    @michaeltablet8577 Před 4 lety +1

    I needed Friday like Timmy Needed Lassie! I love FAQ Friday!

  • @paolotonolo1140
    @paolotonolo1140 Před 4 lety

    This is an outstanding sacrament on mastering, I so much enjoy watching your videos, I have to thank you so much !!

  • @seanterry2457
    @seanterry2457 Před 2 lety +1

    Your guitar solo is what did it for me lol! AWESOME VIDEO!

  • @Melvin7727
    @Melvin7727 Před 4 lety

    How are all of your videos always so brilliant!!!! The answer to that first question helps me tremendously!

  • @ScottQ1
    @ScottQ1 Před 3 lety

    really great video thanks a bunch for the info and keep up the good work

  • @amongtheheathen981
    @amongtheheathen981 Před 2 lety +1

    That point about the reference track is pure gold.

  • @flyingjewelstudios
    @flyingjewelstudios Před rokem

    Some very good advice found in this video... thank you Warren.

  • @OneDarkMartian
    @OneDarkMartian Před 4 lety

    This is such a great, well explained video, thank you. I'm guilty of some of those things you mention so great to hear your advice.

  • @lordwormpie
    @lordwormpie Před 2 lety

    This has bugged me for so long. Researched for months. This is the best vid on subject. NOW I get it. You can go to bed tonight knowing you have made a fellow Brit very, very VERY happy. Thanks so much 🙏🏼

  • @trollstjerne
    @trollstjerne Před 4 lety

    Nice video Warrren. Very helpful advice 👍

  • @andrewheller52
    @andrewheller52 Před 4 lety

    Thanks for answering my question Warren! This video was super helpful!

  • @mattalan5218
    @mattalan5218 Před 3 lety

    Just stumbled across your channel Warren. Absolutely brilliant content, appreciate all the great advice and keeps my practice time really fresh with plenty of ideas to work on. Many thanks 😊

  • @samidee4ever
    @samidee4ever Před 4 lety

    Thank so much for your all your lessons!, Warren! You rock! Be safe!

  • @jrhodes6639
    @jrhodes6639 Před 2 lety

    I've only just discovered this channel and the wealth of knowledge being presented here is just outstanding! I have so much to learn 😂

  • @LyndonWesleyMusic
    @LyndonWesleyMusic Před 3 lety

    Great information as always and well explained. Thanks Warren!

  • @JasonBrockStick
    @JasonBrockStick Před 4 lety

    Awesome video! Great explanations :) This really helped me and quite timely! Thank you sir!

  • @FORCEGOD
    @FORCEGOD Před 4 lety

    Love your latest videos, really interresting topics! Thank u Warren

  • @gospelmuvgospelmuv
    @gospelmuvgospelmuv Před 4 lety

    Thanks Warren for sharing!

  • @abovemeaning166
    @abovemeaning166 Před 3 lety

    use your intuition and never stop growing!!! sending love and light and blessings

  • @1talbeat
    @1talbeat Před 3 lety

    Amazing explanation! Thanks

  • @Prod.Reefah
    @Prod.Reefah Před 4 lety +1

    Amazing video sir thank you 🙏🏽

  • @lo-rem
    @lo-rem Před 4 lety +1

    Every time I watch one of your videos I learn something new. Thank you Warren!

  • @blakejohnsoncsr
    @blakejohnsoncsr Před 3 lety

    Warren! Your positivity is an inspiration.

  • @0OO1
    @0OO1 Před 4 lety

    Great detail, thanks so much.

  • @brian1749
    @brian1749 Před 3 lety

    Excellent tips!!!

  • @chrisibbetson
    @chrisibbetson Před 4 lety

    5mins35sec onwards, Now that is pure gold right there! Really nicely explained

  • @bobbykanemusictube
    @bobbykanemusictube Před 4 lety +6

    Thank you for all of this. I'm still getting the hang of multiple levels of compression going beyond just the tracks and the drum bus. I've learned so much from you. Seriously. You're the best, Warren.

  • @jacquelamontharenberg
    @jacquelamontharenberg Před 4 lety

    Excellent very useful info Warren. Luv u bro....thank u very much

  • @highstreetjackmusic
    @highstreetjackmusic Před 4 lety

    Great episode. Thank you.

  • @bob4analog
    @bob4analog Před 4 lety +5

    16:16 Referencing other music is such a great idea for mixing and balancing. I've been doing this for many years now.. it just works. Of course, doing it at low levels is key to getting the the right end result.

  • @LyudmilaOsipova
    @LyudmilaOsipova Před 3 lety +1

    Remarkable sharing of experiences and observations! Thanks, Warren!!!

  • @officialisraeldammy
    @officialisraeldammy Před 4 lety

    I just love this man, this info is so exciting

  • @johngammon963
    @johngammon963 Před 4 lety

    Really good advice, invaluable, thanks Warren

  • @sqguitar
    @sqguitar Před 4 lety +1

    Wow, I had totally forgotten that TfF track Woman in Chains... Such a blast from my past! Great, great advice as always Warren, love your enthusiasm and sharing.

  • @mabrystudios5880
    @mabrystudios5880 Před 4 lety

    I so much enjoy your video's Warren!

  • @EpicWinz
    @EpicWinz Před 3 lety +1

    REALLY good video - very informative. Thanks :)

  • @darrenross9168
    @darrenross9168 Před 4 lety

    Hi Warren, great advice as always, thank you, all the best.

  • @lefooo
    @lefooo Před 4 lety +6

    I feel like one of the "secrets" mixers shy away from talking about is....you don't use limiters only in the master bus. You use it heavily on your individual tracks and it's super important.

    • @andyroseby4539
      @andyroseby4539 Před 2 lety

      Thanks for that, you might have answered my question above?

  • @WadeMarshallMusic
    @WadeMarshallMusic Před 4 lety +2

    THIS is a GREAT question :)

  • @STOLGUITARS
    @STOLGUITARS Před 4 lety

    Ty warren great info :) always love NGD

  • @rudolfbaethge282
    @rudolfbaethge282 Před 4 lety +1

    WOW, Im proud to say I have listen "woman in chains" Tear for Fears for the FIRST TIME. I completely understand what you mean Warren!. Im using my favorite AKG headphones and have discovered HOW a mix should sound! It was lf my ears somehow "clean up" from years of mud..... ;). FANTASTIC!!! Tus

  • @italianbirdvideos6190
    @italianbirdvideos6190 Před 4 lety

    So good Warren.

  • @Not-Only-Reaper-Tutorials

    always great helpful suggestions 👍👍👍

  • @Cheesecake1559
    @Cheesecake1559 Před 2 lety +1

    Mate, Never learned so much in a youtube channel like I do on yours. Very Very grateful, what a beast!

  • @DarrenWinklerMusic
    @DarrenWinklerMusic Před 4 lety

    This has been an amazing week at PLOP.
    Thank You Warren!

  • @MartinLuxen
    @MartinLuxen Před 4 lety

    Thank you Warren! Great questions again and WOW, what a beautiful looking (and sounding) guitar! I guess you'll be playing a lot on it in new vids ;)

  • @robertwhiting2965
    @robertwhiting2965 Před 2 lety

    Fairly new Subscriber, been watching now for over a year, gotta say at 1st I wasn't sure about Warren but he's grown on me and his advise and knowledge is far beyond, I've been a Guitar Player for over 40 years and an Amateur recording engineer, I've learned so much in the Last year, my mixes are sounding much much better

  • @aipsong
    @aipsong Před 4 lety +1

    Thanks! A really precise load of important information.

  • @IIONIK
    @IIONIK Před 2 lety +1

    God bless you man! You truly are a gem in the music world.

  • @crawlingman7003
    @crawlingman7003 Před rokem +1

    Amazing topic, and such a good teacher- Warren.

  • @matbell1514
    @matbell1514 Před 4 lety

    Thanks Warren, superb advice

  • @MrMemyselfandi415
    @MrMemyselfandi415 Před 3 lety

    IT'S OFFICIAL WARREN!!! I LOVE YOU!!! XD Or maybe it's that I love that you talk about music and equipment....or both!...I can't tell which. =) But really...you seem so dang nice and you're clearly very knowledgeable. Thank you for your efforts.
    Since you asked....While I try to make sure all of my tracks are individually dialed in before they blend together, I've started to get rid of all of the frequencies outside of 20hz-20khz with an EQ because anything lower than that isn't going to be heard anyway and it robs your tracks of headroom as they're pushed through your stereo buss. Sometimes I'll round off the very highest and lowest frequencies and sculpt even more towards the middle if the song calls for it.
    For vocals I take out more of the low end bass and beef from the proximity effect that I used to LOVE but was throwing things off. Now I try to blend in as much as I can without messing up the mix.
    Then I'll use a limiter to get rid of any fast peaks that would push through my compressor and clip. Then I'll use the MV2 to get just a bit of low end enhancement so I can hear the quieter parts of the vocal. I sometimes switch which is first. Then I use a dynamic EQ or multi band compressor to try and chill out the areas that are problematic and honky here and there, and THEN I'll pump that through a really phat and round sounding compressor with a slower attack and a relatively fast release...like the Rcomp...or even the 1176.
    Then I'll make sure everything from like 500hz to 2.5k sounds amazing and phat. I'm using EQ Before AND AFTER compression in a way that I never have before. I was always of the thinking that you sculpted your tone early and ran that through the compressor to phatten up and round things out as you leaned in, and that was it. Now if I get it right coming into the compressor early on...I can boost frequencies afterwards which would otherwise be uncomfortable to listen to. It's really something. It's the same EQ...and same frequencies...but they sound better and work when they're controlled right and boosted after compression. I've heard it said that you cut before compression and boost afterwards and that seems to work for me.
    If I can get the mid range right THAT is how I get loud mixes. There's so much damn energy there that I can't believe I missed it for so long. I always tried to cut out the mid range to get that hifi sound and in the end, the best tracks out there aren't are scooped as much as we probably think. OR if they are, they're cutting certain frequencies to take your focus to the others. It's really fascinating.....especially how some frequencies can mask others that are there.
    So...lots of serial limiting, compression, multiband compression, pre and post EQ for me. I use Fabfilter stuff, but I also like the Renaissance EQ for it's analog and old school kind of tone. I dig using the API 550A just for the op amp tone...It's really something. And lastly, getting loud mixes can happen when you work with textures and vibe in your sound. So I SWEAR BY the Analog Designs Black Box, or the vertigo VSM-3 to make the track get overtones and textures that carry. There ya go....hope that recipe helps someone. Probably not new by any means but I sure wish someone had said that to me years ago. Peace

  • @19Stride
    @19Stride Před 4 lety

    Warren listening to you always makes me wanna open a session right away 😜🤘🏼

  • @Huliwig
    @Huliwig Před 3 lety +2

    Man, I'm so happy to have found your channel!
    I'm currently studying to be a mixing engineer and I have to say that your content inspires me so much!
    Thanks for doing this, greetings from Finland :)

  • @AllanGildea
    @AllanGildea Před 4 lety

    So helpful, thanks Warren!

  • @Nathaniel297
    @Nathaniel297 Před 3 lety +1

    This is the greatest channel around I have just recently started mixing as I am doing a course at my local college I would love to be at top level this time next year

  • @joejurneke9576
    @joejurneke9576 Před 4 lety

    Great discussion

  • @queenpurple8433
    @queenpurple8433 Před 3 lety

    Warren lookin like a snacc as always. This comes in handy for mixing my buddys’ and my EP

  • @MixChecks
    @MixChecks Před 4 lety

    All my mixing secrets summed up in less than 5 min on the very first question lol. Nicely done Warren ;)

  • @nikolaudio
    @nikolaudio Před rokem

    Thanks for this man👍👍👍👍

  • @guybuddy1
    @guybuddy1 Před 4 lety +4

    13:16 Now THAT'S a beautiful guitar right there.

  • @PatrickLesser
    @PatrickLesser Před 4 lety +19

    "Woman in Chains" is my favourite reference-track as well.... mindblowing mix.... on good soundsystems the voice of Oleta Adams is hovering over the voice of Roland Orzabal....

    • @yrmthr
      @yrmthr Před 4 lety +2

      Mine too!! Phil collins played drums on the tune! That whole album is such a sonic treat. I have an original UK vinyl pressing that is UNREAL

    • @Producelikeapro
      @Producelikeapro  Před 4 lety +1

      Agreed amazing mix Patrick!

    • @terminalbliss
      @terminalbliss Před 4 lety

      Mine as well. Amazing mix.

    • @gilbertspader7974
      @gilbertspader7974 Před 4 lety

      Shout shout let it all out !!!!!!

    • @alexeysmirnovguitar
      @alexeysmirnovguitar Před 4 lety

      As I come from Russia, I first heard Woman in chains after Warren mentioned it. I was blown away by everything in this masterpiece. That’s why I always check new speakers with this song and it always works! Great song, great lyrics, great production and obviously mindblowing mixing by the greatest Bob Clearmountain. He is truly a master of balance and tasteful sound effects.

  • @HitTheRoadMusicStudio
    @HitTheRoadMusicStudio Před 4 lety

    Uuuuuuuh that's what I need, thanks for this wonderful tutorials and sharing your tips and tricks 🤘
    I use multiple Parallel Busses, for example 4 different or the Drums, one is pumping the Drum Bus (EMI TG12345), one is Crushing it (Devil Loc Deluxe), one is for Kick/Snare separately (VLA 3-A) and one is more for the high mid's / high's and wideness ..
    .. and sometimes even more compression :)

  • @albertorobinson7611
    @albertorobinson7611 Před 4 lety

    As always nice and even, and enjoy

  • @ambientshane
    @ambientshane Před 3 lety

    I use some form of compression on most channels, kinda gels all those frequencies together. Great Channel by the way.

  • @robmcclurg4139
    @robmcclurg4139 Před 4 lety

    Stay Marvelous, Warren.

  • @ericofelix2005
    @ericofelix2005 Před 3 lety +2

    It's a big thing you share, Warren, thank you! For those who understand what i mean, your mix will be improved a lot after listening this video 😉

  • @MCAlvesPortugal
    @MCAlvesPortugal Před 4 lety

    Great advices.😎

  • @elcagondevoxer7473
    @elcagondevoxer7473 Před 4 lety

    i love this guy!

  • @prinsezkaffeehexen8196

    Something that changed everything for me was creating compression busses for different goals, mostly on for the rythmic section were I send my (already individually treated then grouped then treated) drums and bass and then I have Ableton's effect rack with a sub, low, low mids, hi mids and hi (sometime only mid, not low and hi mid appart) each compressed according to what's needed. Than I use the level of each part as an eq (most of the time I only lower the low mids by one or two dB as it takes off some mud). And I do the same thing except with different eq settings before the compression for what I want in the center, then in the sides, and then for my sends. It really changed the sound of my music and made it sounding a lot more professional!

  • @splashesin8
    @splashesin8 Před 4 lety

    Oh man❣️✨ Sounds like nice gig bag too! 😃🎉
    ...and my takeaway is reference tracks everywhere, and then compare headphone difference. 💖

  • @paul_arntz_mixes
    @paul_arntz_mixes Před 4 lety

    Great video. Thanks!

  • @ChrisArlesMusic
    @ChrisArlesMusic Před rokem

    YES !!! multi parallel is the answer ;) I'm doing standard com on each channel plus parallel comp on each elements of the drums then parallel comp on the drum-bus then parallel on the full music mix-bus. Nothing on the master-bus, a bit of limiting (-0.1 db) to avoid clipping if necessary but mostly nothing.

  • @DrDeese
    @DrDeese Před 4 lety

    Pepapepachoo! 😆 def don’t want a limiter doing that! Good video 👍

  • @Wh1teland
    @Wh1teland Před 4 lety

    Your best advice video 🔥🔥🙏

  • @dimitriskovaios
    @dimitriskovaios Před 4 lety +1

    Guitar unboxing in a production stuff YT channel?
    You keep earning respect points!
    Great tips and advice, as always! 👌

    • @Producelikeapro
      @Producelikeapro  Před 4 lety +2

      Thanks ever so much Dimitris! I am still guitar player, that's why I got into music in the first place!

  • @thekaniack7895
    @thekaniack7895 Před 3 lety +1

    Thank you! this is amazing stuff.