A key component in your studio is the interface. Invest in a good one to record and deliver the best quality external sounds to your sequencer
Getting yourself a decent interface is essential – Focusrite’s Scarlett range are interface industry leaders
iii) Improving the signal… again!
In the olden days mixing desks were used to record and featured extra elements to manipulate the input
signal like EQ (to adjust the bass and treble); the aforementioned mic preamp; compression (to reduce the
highs and lows of a signal so that it can be raised in perceived volume – more on this later); and noise
gates (so stop ‘hiss’).
With most of the mixing now done inside the computer (see later) actual proper mixing desks are
becoming rarer but ‘channel strips’ are becoming increasingly popular to emulate individual channels of a
mixer so you can apply compression, noise gating, EQ and preamps to individual instruments as you
record their signals into your computer. Many channels strips are based on classic (read ‘expensive’)
mixers which were used in the analogue heyday of recording (the 60s and 70s) and deliver a classic
analogue character to your signal.
Be warned: you can (and arguably should) spend a lot of money on decent quality interfaces and channel
strips.
RULE! Getting the best signal in to your computer is vital. Make sure you put aside a larger
portion of your budget aside for a decent interface and channels strip or combination of the
two.
So that’s the outside world of music taken care of. With a decent interface you can mic up and plug in
vocalists and instruments into your computer and record them. You now have track after track of these
external audio tracks to play with and mix. Time to look inside your computer and see what’s on offer
there to go with them…
2. Using Internal Sounds: Virtual Instruments
In theory you don’t have to record anything from the outside world at all if you don’t want to. Grab a
laptop with a sequencer full of virtual instruments and you can do it all yourself, or at least give it a go.
Virtual instruments offer versions of pretty much every instrument you can imagine… and a lot you can’t.
They can recreate a guitar, piano, synth or drum kit within your sequencer environment all played and
recorded using your computer’s mouse, or a MIDI keyboard/controller.
This virtual instrument technology has opened up different worlds of music making to whole new
audiences so even if you can’t play a note on a ‘proper’ instrument, virtual instruments allow you to strum,
pick, hit, tap and play, all within the safety of your virtual studio.
Forest Kingdom II – A typical example of a MIDI-based Virtual Instrument
Virtual instruments have been with us for some years now and are fairly straightforward to program so
there are gazillions out there. Pretty much every classic hardware synth and instrument has been
emulated over the years as have many instruments that have never existed. In fact it’s fair to say that there
is a mind-boggling choice. Thankfully most sequencers now come with a good selection of virtual
instruments which cover a lot of bases, so if you choose one of the big six DAWs (Cubase, Logic, Pro Tools,
Reason, FLStudio and Ableton Live) you will have more than enough virtual power at your fingertips.
However if you want to sound different from everyone else then you might want to consider the many
others that are available. We’ll have a buyers guide here soon including some of the top 10s in different
categories so be sure to check back.
3. Using Internal Sounds: Samples
There are many, many companies that produce ready made samples of instruments, drum loops, and
vocal lines for you to buy and drop into your music creations. There used to be a bit of snobbery about
using samples but not so these days – in fact many a tune (and indeed genre) has been based on the
inclusion of great samples.
You can buy collections of samples based on literally anything you can imagine because everything that
can be recorded probably has been recorded and is available. Dance music has beats, basses and leads for
every genre. All other genres are catered for and there are collections based on obscure instruments and
cultures from every corner of the world. Instrument samples like these can also be loaded into software
samplers where they can then be mapped across a keyboard and then ‘played’ adding another level of
flexibility to sample use.
Sample collections are great as a quick fix and especially useful if you are working on many different
pieces of music against tight deadlines. If you want to try some samples out for free MusicTech magazine
has collections available on its DVD every month. You can also find an exclusive collection here so have a
play and see how you get on. You might find that they act as the bare bones of your tracks and then you
flesh them out later with VIs and external recordings. Either way they are a fast and quick ingredient and
it’s well worth having at look at some of the collections available.
4. Mixing
OK, by now we’re assuming you’ve got your head around how you get sounds into your sequencer,
generate them from within it or use sample collections. The next stage is to arrange them and mix them
together. Arranging is simply the process of how your song develops over time, usually with an intro
followed by verses and choruses. Discussing the different aspects of arrangements could be a website in
itself as each arrangement depends on the genre you are working within, but mixing is a subject that we
can cover, albeit on a simple level, right here and right now.
Try to think of your song mix in two dimensions: how it spreads across the stereo spectrum (left to right
across your speakers or headphones) and how it spreads across the frequency range (think bottom, bass,
to top, treble). Generally speaking having a good spread in both dimensions is the key. You don’t want a
too bass-heavy mix in the same way that you do not you want everything coming out of just your left
speaker.
In terms of stereo placement the panning controls in your sequencer track channels allow you to place
each track anywhere between far left and far right. The rule is the bassier the track the more central it is so
bass-lines of tracks tend to sit in the middle of the stereo spectrum acting as the backbone of a track. The
vocal can sit close to it as its higher frequency allows the vocal to still be apart from the bass and this is a
rule you can follow (although you don’t have to!): instruments can sit with each other in the same stereo
position as long as their frequencies don’t clash too much. Feel free to experiment though, move things
around, and if it sounds good it is good! And don’t be afraid to EQ certain parts of a track to make them sit
better and not clash against other parts.
Effects For Mixing
As well as virtual instruments most sequencers come packed with stacks of virtual effects, many of which
you can use in the mixing process. We’ve discussed how EQ can lift or lower the impact of certain
elements in a mix. Effects such as reverb can make parts of your mix sound like they have been recorded
in different rooms by adding reflective echoes. Echoes themselves can make parts repeats while chorus
and harmony effects add additional melodic content.
It can be easy to get overwhelemed when using too many effects!
More creative effects include amp simulators that can be, for example, applied to acoustic guitar tracks to
make them sound electric. In fact guitar effects like this are very common so expect to see tremolos,
distortion, overdrives, flangers and the like too. Like the virtual instruments mentioned above, virtual
effects replicate pretty much every hardware unit ever made (and in many cases not made). Imagine
anything you can do to a sound and that effect will be available as one of the virtual ones that ship with
your DAW or from third party developers.
Again check out MusicTech magazine and this website for regular, more in depth guides to mixing within
different sequencers.
5. Monitoring
RULE! Buy the best monitors you can afford. They are arguably the most important items
in your studio…That’s quite a claim but it’s also a true one.
There’s no use spending thousands on audio interfaces, channels strips, sequencers, effects and external
instruments if you are going to listen to the results of your music production through a pair of tin cans tied
to a piece of string. General rule: the cheaper the speakers, the more coloured they are i.e. they are
enhanced in certain frequency ranges to make them better than they really are. Sub £100 computer
speakers, for example, often have their bass response extended so they sound like beefier and bigger
monitors. Trouble is, when you mix on monitors like this your bass might sound good on them but as soon
as you play the resultant mix on another set of less bass-enhanced speakers the results will almost
definitely sound weedy because you will have lowered the bass while mixing on your bass-heavy monitors.
Check out our lists of the best monitors you can buy on a budget and for an intermediate price here
Think of it this way: those cheaper monitors are lying to you! What you really need are monitors that don’t
lie, monitors that are totally, almost brutally honest – monitors that tell it like it is. If your mix is ****,
they will tell you, simple!
Good monitors reveal exactly what your mix sounds like: from left to right, from top to bottom. They
translate everything you do within your sequencer exactly, so if you decide to enhance the bass of your
kicking kick, you will be able hear the result of that enhancement and pinpoint the effects it has on the rest
of your mix.
So, honesty is key and you’ve probably guessed by now, honestly costs. Yes, the more you pay, the more
honest your monitors will be i.e. they will have a flat frequency response with no enhancements in the
bass, mids or trebles, just flat across the board. Having said that you can get good monitors at all price
ranges. Those £5k monitors might be the best out there, but those £1k ones might deliver 95% of the
benefits.
Ultimately it’s up to you: is that extra 5% worth another £4k? Here at MusicTech we firmly believe that
less, more expensive items in your studio will give you a better sound so, yes, that extra outlay is worth it.
One other thing to remember, no matter what you spend on your monitors you will need good acoustics.
6. Mastering – Welcome To The Dark Side
According to many experienced mastering engineers, you aren’t going to master mastering unless you’ve
been at it for at least 30 years. It’s certainly not something, they would say, that beginners should even
consider. But we disagree… to a certain extent anyway. Mastering is certainly something that you should
be aware of at the mixing stage of your music production, and if you want to give it a go, it’s best to learn
about this ‘dark art’ by getting hands on and giving it a go. But what exactly is it?
The mastering process begins as the mixing process ends. It’s what takes that mix and delivers the final
‘master’ of the track to the end user, possibly via CD, or MP3, so takes into account fades, track lengths
and codes, and noise reduction. But aside from these more technical issues it is a process that uses EQ,
compression and stereo spreading to make your mix sound more commercial and professional.
It begins once you are happy with your mix – that everything sits in the right place, that everything is EQd
to perfection and that the mix sounds good on several systems. First it’s time to add a touch of magic dust,
a feel to the mix that makes it sound brighter, and right up there with the tracks you are trying to emulate
in terms of quality.
So this is one of the rules of mastering: have some of your favourite commercial mixes by your favoured
artists loaded into your DAW ready to A-B with your track. You might as well aim for the top and this is an
instant way to hear how your mastering process is developing by doing direct comparisons with ‘the real
thing’.So what is the process? You have your stereo mix and the first stage of mastering is generally to EQ
and compress – and this is where it gets a little controversial. When you do any processing at this stage
remember you are thinking about the whole mix, not just parts of it.
So if you think that you need to add bass to your bass line at this stage, it’s too late, this should have been
done at the mix stage. EQ-ing at this stage is more subtle: to add a shimmer at the high end or a sparkle to
mids but to do these actions across the whole track, not parts of it.
Compression is all about gently compressing certain elements within a mix so the whole thing can be lifted
with limiting. You are not trying to crush the mix and then simply make it louder, otherwise you’ll be
entering ‘the loudness wars’ which have seen mixes get ever louder – but not necessarily better – over
recent years. A great master is not just loud, it is full and dynamic, it has highs and lows, impact and
punch… So compress carefully and drive the input of your limiter for extra impact.
The final aspects of mastering include possible noise reduction – used less these days as people mix inside
their computers so any noise is reduced at the mix stage or simply doesn’t exist as everything is done
within the digital environment – and stereo spreading. Again, it’s best to use this latter process subtly and
sparingly as much of the stereo spread should have been dealt with at the mix stage and most of your
instruments will have been placed carefully here so if you start pushing them further here it may just be
too much. Which is the overall rule of mastering…
Rule! Be subtle when mastering, don’t increase everything just for the sake of it and never
master to make it simply louder.
And that’s it for now. This was a (hopefully) gentle and general introduction to the world of music
production. We’ll be returning regularly to enhance sections and add to it. If you have any questions or
areas you’d like us to include
A key component in your studio hardware
Reviewed by Lehvi
on
October 03, 2018
Rating:
No comments: