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music_mixing_and_mastering

Are you currently a musician, artist or within a band that's working on a new music project? This article is part of a series developed to assist you have got the top encounter each time you're inside the recording studio. The topic for this short article is what do I should bring to a mixing session at a professional studio.

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I am going to assume you have recorded your individual song and are going to the studio to operate using a expert mix engineer. This really is an essential question simply because there's a large amount of confusion about this subject.

If you've recorded your individual song you're most likely employing a digital audio workstation (Pro-Tools, Logic, Cubase, Reaper, and so forth.) to make your multi-track recording. So you'll have numerous unique tracks with various instruments (bass, guitars, kick drum, snare drum, etc.) Your mix engineer will need each of those tracks individually.

There's a couple of techniques this could happen. One way is always to bring the complete studio session project for your mix engineer and have him or her export the audio files they want.

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However, if you are applying software that's different out of your engineer then you definitely may have to export or render each track individually to a separate stereo/mono audio file (.WAV, etc.). You would do this by soloing each and every person track and rendering out only that track as a high-resolution audio file. It's important to render every track to the exact length of your full song so every thing syncs up appropriately when your mix engineer opens it up. So even when you've got a vocal track that only plays incidentally by way of the song, the render of that track really should nonetheless be the whole length of time of one's song.

music_mixing_and_mastering.txt · Last modified: 2017/05/24 11:12 (external edit)