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how much do tracking and mixing contribute to a recording?

50:50?

i seem to think tracking is a lot more important than mixing
ive heard some awesome music at the studio as it is being recorded
some of the best stuff ive heard
completely unmixed

of course this depends on the type of music and tracking techniques
lets say for this instance
laying down drum and bass bed tracks
and overdubbing the rest (guitar, vocals, keys, harmonica etc...)

id say something like 70:30

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Comments

Davedog Thu, 05/31/2007 - 17:23

The biggest complaint you hear about, is the mix specialists, at how poorly a lot of stuff is recorded.

There are people who make a huge living polishing turds.....They polish them so bright that the light fairly gleams off of em, blinding anyone looking at them to the point that they cant be seen as a turd until you've listened a couple of times. B that tim the record companies have your money and its too late.

So the answer I have is one cannot function properly without the other and they have to be equal in terms of importance and quality as well as being done in the proper order.

anonymous Wed, 06/06/2007 - 17:34

I just recorded my first album this spring. Me and my co-producer then sent it off to Portland to have a few more tracks laid down and then have it mixed proffessionaly due to self-inflicted time constraints. The guys doing the mix were good but were given only like a day before my co-producer jumped the fucking gun and had it mastered. What a huge mistake! After almost a month of me doing the tracking and getting some incredible sounds the project went from a potential "A" to a friggin "B-" in my book. I was a producer and was denied the opportunity to hear the mix before it got mastered. And boy were there some problems, differences between songs, certain stereo techniques that they didn't follow even though they were in my mix notes. All problems that could have been avoided had I been given a chance to critique the mix before it got mastered.

Indeed you need good tracking but a shoddy rushed mix can certainly be like a turd in a sterling bowl.

anonymous Wed, 06/06/2007 - 17:37

I just recorded my first album this spring. Me and my co-producer then sent it off to Portland to have a few more tracks laid down and then have it mixed proffessionaly due to self-inflicted time constraints. The guys doing the mix were good but were given only like a day before my co-producer jumped the fucking gun and had it mastered. What a huge mistake! After almost a month of me doing the tracking and getting some incredible sounds the project went from a potential "A" to a friggin "B-" in my book. I was a producer and was denied the opportunity to hear the mix before it got mastered. And boy were there some problems, differences between songs, certain stereo techniques that they didn't follow even though they were in my mix notes. All problems that could have been avoided had I been given a chance to critique the mix before it got mastered.

Indeed you need good tracking but a shoddy rushed mix can certainly be like a turd in a sterling bowl.

Yaseck Fri, 06/08/2007 - 02:12

poor tracking + poor mixing = catastrophy
poor tracking + good mixing = possible?
good tracking + poor mixing = destruction
good tracking + good mixing = yeah!

So both of them: tracking and mixing are important. Simple adjusting levels is a part of mixing. So You cannot avoid it.
but, I would say that tracking is more important.