Mixing Start To Finish: A Step by Step Guide to Balanced Mixes
Video Statistics and Information
Channel: In The Mix
Views: 265,039
Rating: 4.9819975 out of 5
Keywords: Mixing, mixing, start to finish, basics, advanced, lesson, in the mix, loud mixing, how to, music production, how to master music, mixing tutorial, mixing every step, mix, how to mix, mixing start to finish, electronic, pop, ambient, the workday release, mixing vocals, fl studio mixing, loud, clear, balanced, techniques, tips, tricks
Id: yRzMby4PXzc
Channel Id: undefined
Length: 32min 15sec (1935 seconds)
Published: Sat Mar 20 2021
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Alright, not going to watch the whole thing, got to the half-way point and it's clear to me what the video is: he is just mixing while he explains his thought process.
Most of the things he is saying are reasonable. But here is the thing, this is just one guy's approach. There are as many specific ways to mix as there are people. So this video is only one guy's mixing approach.
As an introductory video, it's not what I would recommend someone starting up. And if the point is just watching someone mix to get an idea of what that looks like, I would recommend watching an actual seasoned professional who has mixed stuff you may have heard of. We have an entire article in our wiki dedicated to this topic: https://www.reddit.com/r/mixingmastering/wiki/learning-on-youtube
I find that most people teaching things on YouTube want to be YouTube personalities more than they want to teach so it’s hit or miss. But with that said, I think you should watch as many videos as you can and try as many things out as you can. If you like it and it works, put it in the quiver. If it doesn’t, throw it out. More importantly than getting reliable sources of information is to rely on yourself. That means sitting at the desk and listening your ass off and using the tools to get closer to what you think is good
Best way to learn mixing is mixing live. It'll give you all you need (I'm not saying GO DO IT) for the thought process that mixing needs. I doubt a YT video will teach you how to tune drums, guitars, mix monitors and FOH, deal with the singer asking for more and the manager saying they need more time plus 100 other things like you learn in an hour of mixing live.
What I'm saying is mixing is better learned by... mixing. Create your own process, nothing you get from a YT video will replace creating your own.