Ive had clients in the studio who had a good vision, but not necessarily the best pair of ears, and theyve been sat behind me saying, you know what, I think you need to brighten that snare....can you add some at around 2.5k?....so i've grabbed an EQ pot on an empty channel, tweaked it some, nodded my head, and said yeh I think you're right....the client stood behind immediately proclaims 'thats it, much better, I thought thats what it needed'
Haha hell yea. I did some live sound and my teacher taught me to have an "asshole fader". I laughed as I marked it "AF" on the masking tape, and luckily I only had to use it once, as Mr. Drunky told me how much the guitars needed to come up.
And to reinforce the first part of Hypno's 4th point about A/B'ing.....make a CD of 20 second clips of your fave mixed tracks, and listen to them back to back. Having this relative perspective, not only will you realize that some are mixed nowhere near as well as you thought, but it will help you learn how mixes should sound in your room, and give you a reference point for your own mixes..
B
Hell yea man. You ever listen to Golden Ears? I met that guy Dave Moulton (I think that's his name). Gave me an entirely new perspective to what I can do with my mixes. In my early days I never thought of snippets; always mixed entire songs back to back in alt mixes. But then I discovered just bouncing the hook and then the verse like 5-8 times. BUT I also had to learn the hard way to make sure I kept a track list of which mixes were in order!!!
Awesome comments on here...
Sanova, I hear you man... I used to sit for HOURS mixing, then I'd come back to it the next day and it would sound HORRIBLE. But then it only took an hour or two to tweak it from there at least.
Formant, that's a great point. A lot of people get caught up in the stereo world early, and then wonder why the right side is peaking so much. Mono is always a good place to start, especially with composition. However, sometimes it's good to hear an effect or a hard pan while you're composing to get certain effects.