It's May 23, 2024, 07:17:05 AM
How would you know what the best mixed tracks are? Wouldn't you have to hear the before and after?
Dre said his best mixed record is In Da Club. He took it as well as a reference track when developing the first beats headphones
its hard to differentiate the mixing from the song. how ? if the song is good,the mixing is good.i was thinking at Dogg Food and ATL Forever rich thugs because these 2 albums have a very original sound
Straight forward question. I'm thinking about hiring someone over at soundbetter.com to mix/master and I know they are going to want a reference track to work with. I want to see what you consider a good mix + master.
Bullshit questin 85-90 ist the mix the rest is mastering, if you have a good mix.....just a pointless questionbut its Abusive you need some help for your production, but if you hear a good mix, that doesn't mean you'll get it right
I mean, there's a lot to choose from, we're mostly talking tracks and albums that Dr. Dre and DJ Quik have been involved in within the last 25 years or so. I suppose you could say that mixing and mastering have gotten better at the same time that production has advanced, they go hand-in-hand.I always think that albums like Chronic 2001, Rhythm-al-ism and Street Gospel have great mixing/mastering because they sound so clean and bass-heavy when played at a decent volume level on a good sound system, and you can really hear and appreciate different layers of the beat. But that could be over-simplifying things and I'm sure a studio engineer could explain it better than me.Consider Snoop Dogg's 'Blue Carpet Treatment' album - the three tracks that Dr. Dre produced and mixed are head and shoulders above the rest of the tracks on that album, and that Snoop album is full of great tracks from a host of top-notch producers.
it might be dogg foodbecause the mixing turned into ghost producing and no, you don’t need to hear a track before it was mixed to know it was mixed exceptionally well