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#360053 - 02/01/13 10:20 AM
Re: Balanced Demos and Recordings
[Re: Joesax]
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Registered: 04/25/05
Posts: 14282
Loc: NW Florida
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Nice Joe...
Would you mind if I offered a critique? The first thing that jumps out at me is that, for some reason, the mix appears to be panned off to the left a bit.. The pad and the solos seem to be coming from the center a bit more, but levels between L & R sides looks to be off by several db. Take care to center your mix! Maybe it's just the Motif parts?
Next, I'd roll off just a little of the low mids on that snare sound. It's a bit tubby, IMO. Or maybe even try selecting a different snare that doesn't dominate the mix quite so much. And, while I am happy that, like me, you are concerned about overly emphasizing the RH, I'd say that the piano COULD come up a bit. Or even better, try playing that melody in octaves, or even better, double octaves. That would help it pop nicely!
You say you don't use a sequencer, and put all this down live, but, even if just for training purposes, there's one very big advantage to using the sequencer... It gives you the opportunity to adjust things afterwards, experiment with part volumes to dial everything in precisely, and then look at how much you moved each part, and try to look for trends. Do you tend to always need to bring the piano up? Do you always need to bring the sax down? Useful information to know when you are making Performances, as you can dial those adjustments in BEFORE you play, and give yourself a better chance of getting it right the first time!
But a nice moody tune... perhaps the drums could be more acoustic (brushes or mallets, maybe?) to blend with it?
I'm glad you are hearing this RH dominance on arranger stuff. But there's a need for caution in going too far the other way, too.
_________________________
An arranger is just a tool. What matters is what you build with it..!
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