Audio Mixing
Mixing audio is an art form, and it makes or breaks a track. There is no new song hit without a great mix. Here is how mixing worked in the past. A great mix takes all the instrument sounds and effects that are part of a recording and combines them live at once. It was before multi-track came along. During a live performance, multiple audio signals mixing made the record. Repeating the song needs to be done until no mistakes are made for this reason. An artist has to repeat the take if an error occurs. There are three distinct parts: the discipline has changed dramatically from the early years. The act of recording is the first step. Overdubbing is next in the process. Mixing is the final step. The invention of the multi-track has caused this change. I have superior mixing capabilities through my digital/analog hybrid system. This system brings that warm analog sound into the modern digital age. There are two ways to achieve a warm analog sound. Applying it on an individual track is the first. The second example can be used globally on the stereo mix of all the tracks. I will mix your song to exact genre-specific standards. I achieve that by removing the instrument masks. Once that is done, I check it against thousands of analyzed songs using Izotope’s Tonal Balance. This way, your mix will stand up to that tonal quality. Then it is on to the mastering.