It depend I try to keep everything balanced, but I like my drums to be out front
yeah....I usually mix too and around my drums. This is hip hop/rap......shit, urban music period....the drums are always the show stopper imo.
Word, like LDB said, your drums, bass, and vocal are your power structure so you need to mix around those elements once you get them hittin right first.
Samples can be much trickier then synth stuff since theres going to be artifacts in the samples that often conflict with existing frequencies in your mix already....So the big trick with mixing samples is to determine what frequencies are unwanted and remove them via EQ.
Ya, good info. If theres a sound in the sample thats too low and you want to bring it up without effecting the other stuff, crush the shit out of it. One good tip I read about before is, start with all the faders down, turn the vocals up, then turn everything up around the vocals (id usually start with the kick, then snare, then hi hat, then sample, then other stuff).
How can I tell what frequencies need EQ'ing? How do I determine the frequencies of a sample?
Its also good to have an idea on what direction your trying to go with the track, instead of just siting down doing everything randomly. If you want it to be dirty or grimey/ clean and smooth. It's like a chess game once you have everything sequenced and arranged then you gotta get everything to sound good but I usually do rough mix as I go so I'm not doing double work I'm just accustomed to that process. Every sample is different although I find it more challenging turning shit into sugar.
It's all what you feel comfortable using. thedreampolice swears by Reason, says he can get any sound out of it.
How can I tell what frequencies need EQ'ing? How do I determine the frequencies of a sample?