What are the the most common mistakes that new engineers tend to make when recording and mixing down their tracks?
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In general, overdoing everything. New people tend to add reverb, compression, and other effects just because they can. Audio production is one area where quantity cannot replace quality. |
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Not taking enough time to set up & test things out. Chances are, you won't actually be able to fix it in the mix. |
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Being too stressed when things are getting slightly complicated or something doesn't work. Musicians are generally nice people (really, this is something many people forget as soon as they get behind a mixing desk!), and they allow you to claim all the time you need. As soon as you feel any time pressure during your recording session, your focus on the quality of the music and the way it sounds is decreasing. My advice in such a situation: ask your musicians to leave the studio for half an hour or so, so you can sort things out. Remember that recording and producing should be fun to do, as long as you love the music. :) Secondly: don't be too hard on yourself. Mistakes happen all the time, and the best thing you can do is learn from them, by making them. |
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Pressing "stop" before the reverb trail has died out from the last note of the performance. Or worse, before the actual last note of the performance that he didn't know was there. (I've done this) |
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A big mistake is to stop using your ears. Always keep listening to what you create! I've seen so many people do this, they just do things because they think they are always good things. I know somebody that always used compression because he was told to do so, even when it was completely unnecessary. When I asked him why, he just said: "I just always do this." He was clearly told by somebody else that it could (could!) be useful. If you listen once, you decide that you need for instance a compressor and you applied it with settings that you think are appropriate, don't consider the job done. Use your ears and ask yourself if you are genuinly happy with the result. If you record speech, don't apply an EQ to increase 3KHz and 8KHz to improve the intelligibility if you don't have a real problem with it, or if you don't hear any improvements. Never do anything to your sound if the reason for it is not coming from your ears. Always tend to trusting your ears more than anything you learned. |
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Perfection is the enemy of progress. Don't spend an eternity on your first song just to realize that you don't have the time to finish the rest. Also, for beginners it is best to finish each song before moving onto the next. This way you don't spend days recording and have nothing to show for it. |
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Failing to save your work frequently, or worse, failing to backup your work frequently (or at all). Don't just rely on your recording software's Undo capabilities - always enable Auto-Save if it has that feature. Additionally, setup your digital workstation to automatically save a copy of your work every 15 or 30 minutes, and also save off a snapshot of the entire project including all audio files at the end of every day. Use an online backup service or flash drive. You never know when your recording software is going to hang or crash, or when the HD is going to die. Losing a few hours worth of work is extremely frustrating, but losing an entire album is devastating. |
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Sometimes it helps to walk away from the studio for a while, and listen to something else. That'll keep your ears fresh. Or you can ask someone who hasn't been involved with the project to listen to the mix. |
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Not listening to the master candidate through a variety of speakers (headphones, car stereo, iPod earbuds, etc). Simply using the studio monitors isn't enough. |
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When recording:
When mixing:
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5 ways a newbie can be more professional: 1) Don't mess with the levels while the recording is in process as this changes the signal to noise ratio enough to make the track sound wonky. Set your levels before you punch the record button, I generally run as many takes as needed to set the peak load. 2) Don't expect everything is in tune. Make double sure that every instrument is tuned appropriately for the piece. I say 'appropriately' as some instruments may require a slight nuance differing from standard pitch. For example piano tunings have a wide range of deviation, compare a 'honky-tonk' piano to a concert grand. 3) Don't try to cram everyone into one track (assuming you have a multi-track system). Be careful when you are recording multiple tracks simultaneously, assign as many channels as you need to give each voice it's own track. This will make mixing a lot easier. 4) Don't assume it will all 'fall together'. You have to have a plan. Make a list of tracks, how they will be recorded, what effects might be employed during recording or later. In short, spell everything out before you start. Consider this your script. 5) Don't think you can remember all the details. Make good documentation from session to mixing to master. Document what voice is on each track: guitar, violin, chorus, soprano, tenor, etc. Document anything special like "Hey that sax solo on track 2 needs to be redone because the sax needs a new reed". |
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Sticking to what you know versus experimenting in new methods in music Often times I find myself working in the same chords and instruments because I am comfortable with them. Don't be afraid to try new things. You may be surprised at what other stuff is out there! |
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Not doing enough preproduction. Preproduction is what you do before you sit down in a session. This includes talking with the band, making sure they know what they plan to do. Get lyrics sheets, chord charts, tempo and key of the song, etc. The more you know about the song, the better you can figure out exactly which mics and techniques you want to use. Maybe you can borrow something that you wouldn't be able to if you found out what they were playing when you got to the session. For professional engineers, preproduction also includes finding out how the band plans to pay you for the session. For some reason, there are people out there who seem to think that you will be happy to record them for free. If you don't plan on working for free, make sure they understand that, because it's alot easier to tell someone no before you start recording than it is after you're done mixing and they want the masters. |
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