You’re making quick progress Dengizich, I’m sure a few more attempts will bring more!
Thing is, it pays to not release a demo until you’re satisfied, or at least let people know what you’d like to improve on and the post the edit later as a comparison.
One thing I tend to do is make two or three final mixes, your baseline one, one with the lead down a bit (3-4db down), one with the rhythm (drums, bass and rhythm guitar) up a bit, and then WALK AWAY…
Revisit the mixes the next day, or after at least 8hrs away from the gear. Let your ears rest, get some distance from the project, give yourself a chance to listen with ‘fresh’ ears. Then start comparing with the lead down mix, then the rhythm up mix, then your baseline mix.
9/10 times, you’ll find that the lead down or rhythm up mixes are more balanced. Our ears close down with a lengthy recording and mix session, and we tend to focus on just ONE aspect of the sound mix. A few hours or a day off helps give perspective. Tell yourself you’re listening to someone else’s mix, get picky!
Listening to the mixes very quietly, or from a distance (go into the next room) can make an unbalanced mix easier to spot. Can you still hear EVERYTHING, or is one thing very prominent? Adjust, make another mix, listen again after a few hours. You’ll need less and less of this as you gain experience, but at least ONE ‘timeout’ usually pays dividends, exposing a mix weakness or confirming the mix’s evenness.
If you haven’t got one, get an expression pedal. Utterly indispensable, and it will revolutionize your organ playing..! The B3 sim is utterly useless without one. 🎹😎
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An arranger is just a tool. What matters is what you build with it..!