vs. their engineers. I assume most "pros" probably make beats all day, do a little bit of mixing or whatever go-to techniques they apply, and then that's it until it's time to release, but that's me talking out of my ass.
I think they'd all know how to do it if they're forced to/if the want to, but they don't do a lot. they just do some stuff that are considered mixing but it's really creative/production work, and they send it in.
imo you don't *need* to learn mixing anyway. it's more of a you ain't gotta do it but fuck it somebody gotta do it situation, yk? be it sometime when ur self-releasing, or when ur sending ur shit to A&Rs, or even ur tryna send ur shit to a mix engineer but ur not sure if they'd really get what you're going for so let's hope you can make it sound somewhat like what ur envisioning before sending it in, or u just wanna send it to a battle, or whatever. always useful to know how to mix ur own shit.
dw tho, AI is gonna do it all for u before u know it. personally I'm happy I'm getting to somehow learn how it works even tho it's gonna be a dead job in like 5 years 10 years max, at least in our crumbsy ass level. pretty sure it helps with getting a perspective that not everyone has and I consider that a privilege in it's own way ig. hell maybe if we get on the top end of the production chain it'll be useful again.
but damn tho imagine all the useless info we retained about all the ways an opto compressor is slightly different than a vca one, only for some braindead ass AI to take over our jobs without even "knowing" half of that shit. it just does what it's programmed to and it works. been fun times fr.