Do you have some sort of "order of operations"? I've always been under the idea that in regards to mixing; the first thing you do is adjust levels, then EQ, then whatever else after that. Is that wrong?
Ok, I'll tell you what I do most of the time (I'm talking only hiphop beats) :
I will low-pass and/or hi-pass and adjust the pre-gain on my tracks in the composition stage, on the go as I add elements to my beat. Once it's all there and I start mixing, my order of operation is :
- switch to mono and put my headphones on
- put all my faders down to - infinity
- bring my kick up to hit at - 12db
- then I bring the rest in, one at a time, in relation to the kick, in this order : snare/hihats/other drums/bass/background instruments /lead instruments/vocals
- if, when brought up, one of the track doesn't feel well I might use compression or another tool, depending on what the issue is : clashing frequencies with another track might be solved with eq, sidechain comp or dynamic eq. Volume peaks or drops wil need compression. I never use eq to boost a frequency. If that track lacks presence, I will use some kind of distortion.
- switch to stereo
- pan the "non-important" and "non-bassy" instruments left or right (up to 60%, never completely) to make room for important stuff in the center. If they drop because of phase issues when played on a mono system, it won't matter too much.
- put a mastering strip (with comp/limiter or maximizer,...) on your mixbus/master out (unless you're planning to have it mastered by someone else). I personally use Ozone. You need to keep in mind through the whole process that this last stage here is where your tracks all come alive together... you don't want to push them too hot until here, keep everything low.
I will adjust the tail and level of whatever reverb send I have, mainly lowering it to the point where you can feel it but not hear it.
... from there, I do a lot of tweaking with automations in order to adjust to each part of the song and give stuff dynamics and movement...