Low G
ILLIEN
ill o.g.
I'm producing a project that is close to being finished as far as the recordings go. I've been here on Illmuzik and a few other sites for the past few years working hard at improving my beats, recording techniques, and general songmaking abilities. I don't want my hard work to suffer from a bad mix or mastering job. With the complexity of mixing like automating EQ and knowing just what frequency to cut or boost on any given track I'm not going to be an idiot and try to do everything myself. I know that would ruin everything in the end.
This will be the first project I have done that I want to put "out there" and use as a vehicle to start trying to build a career. Unfortunately, having never produced a full finished project before from start to end I need to learn the process and be as professional as I can when dealing with people so I can get exactly what I want out of it. I don't have a huge budget so knowing what a reasonable rate is per song or day and what I can expect quality wise would help. One guy I checked was $400 a day and another was like $60 per song but would go cheaper if his buddy did mastering (suspect in my eyes).
The studio where I had most of the vocal recordings done at offered to link up mixing and mastering. Just because of the way that place is run and the guy talks (plus the computer mixing magazine with underlines in the "Hot EQ Tips!" section) really made a voice in the back of my head scream "hacks". Those guys deal with mostly rock music so it seemed to me like he was thinking he could get a bunch of my money and not put much effort into the mix. Basically, his pitch didn't fill me with confidence in his abilities.
God's stories of hacks and unprofessional people have got me on my toes. I don't want to come off like that to other people and certainly don't want to associate with them if I can avoid it. I basically started this thread to see if anyone had some solid advice on where to start looking for the right people to work on my project and avoid the pitfalls, hacks, hustlers, and anything else that could go wrong in getting a professional mix and mastering job.
I would also love any tips on ways of possibly getting other people interested enough to invest in this step and try my hand at that "smart businessman" approach people seem to rave about.
Once this mixing and mastering step is done I'll feel better because I have a few other things like album artwork and music videos allready in the works. Hopefully I can impress some people and start building a following when everything finally comes together.
(Promo and distribution is a whole other story but there are plenty of other threads and ideas on that allready)
Peace.
This will be the first project I have done that I want to put "out there" and use as a vehicle to start trying to build a career. Unfortunately, having never produced a full finished project before from start to end I need to learn the process and be as professional as I can when dealing with people so I can get exactly what I want out of it. I don't have a huge budget so knowing what a reasonable rate is per song or day and what I can expect quality wise would help. One guy I checked was $400 a day and another was like $60 per song but would go cheaper if his buddy did mastering (suspect in my eyes).
The studio where I had most of the vocal recordings done at offered to link up mixing and mastering. Just because of the way that place is run and the guy talks (plus the computer mixing magazine with underlines in the "Hot EQ Tips!" section) really made a voice in the back of my head scream "hacks". Those guys deal with mostly rock music so it seemed to me like he was thinking he could get a bunch of my money and not put much effort into the mix. Basically, his pitch didn't fill me with confidence in his abilities.
God's stories of hacks and unprofessional people have got me on my toes. I don't want to come off like that to other people and certainly don't want to associate with them if I can avoid it. I basically started this thread to see if anyone had some solid advice on where to start looking for the right people to work on my project and avoid the pitfalls, hacks, hustlers, and anything else that could go wrong in getting a professional mix and mastering job.
I would also love any tips on ways of possibly getting other people interested enough to invest in this step and try my hand at that "smart businessman" approach people seem to rave about.
Once this mixing and mastering step is done I'll feel better because I have a few other things like album artwork and music videos allready in the works. Hopefully I can impress some people and start building a following when everything finally comes together.
(Promo and distribution is a whole other story but there are plenty of other threads and ideas on that allready)
Peace.