maserati is the master of small moves. everything hes doing is very subtle but it all adds up to an exceptionally balanced and nuanced final mix. of course having well recorded tracks and good production helps a lot
The attention to detail with the H thing. So, so great and inspiring. Not having to second guess a decision and just going for it. Tony Maserati is amazing!
I'm glad that this particular video shows the lesser talked about aspect of mixing, which is "editing". Some people who record don't realize how important the little things like fixing an 'H' sound in a mix can be in saving time and not having to re-record the vocals. As an engineer, I find that a lot of my time is spent either making similar edits to words or aligning the overdubbed tracks to sound better with the first one. I also wonder what Tony's take is too on harsh deep breaths that some artists take before singing or rappin a verse. I always like to tone those down so they are more subtle in the mix and it doesn't make the listener feel as if the artist was short of breath. I even take the time to clean up audible throat pops, swallowing, and saliva click sounds. It's an interesting job, but well worth it when the mixes are done. 😊
How did that "blow your mind" this ability has been available since the inception of digital editing (dating back to the 90's). I am just in awe that he cared enough and took the time to fix it. It is stuff like that which defines a great engineer, Tony is a great engineer. The person who had it before Tony should have fixed it.
He magnified the waveforms, likely to make it more visible where certain parts are. If you look to the left at the audiometers per channel you'll see they're nowhere near 0dB. I tend to magnify the waveforms myself too when mixing, just purely to make navigating through a large session quicker.
Full video available exclusively on mwtm.org/tm-foster-the-people
"Now it'll bother me less" this is really what mixing is lmao
Hahaha, I heard him say that, immediately scrolled to the comments and here it is.
A masterpiece is never finished only abandoned.
maserati is the master of small moves. everything hes doing is very subtle but it all adds up to an exceptionally balanced and nuanced final mix. of course having well recorded tracks and good production helps a lot
Also, these are stems from the artist's mix so they already have pitch correction, fx, plenty of compression
The attention to detail with the H thing.
So, so great and inspiring. Not having to second guess a decision and just going for it.
Tony Maserati is amazing!
I'm glad that this particular video shows the lesser talked about aspect of mixing, which is "editing".
Some people who record don't realize how important the little things like fixing an 'H' sound in a mix can be in saving time and not having to re-record the vocals. As an engineer, I find that a lot of my time is spent either making similar edits to words or aligning the overdubbed tracks to sound better with the first one.
I also wonder what Tony's take is too on harsh deep breaths that some artists take before singing or rappin a verse. I always like to tone those down so they are more subtle in the mix and it doesn't make the listener feel as if the artist was short of breath. I even take the time to clean up audible throat pops, swallowing, and saliva click sounds. It's an interesting job, but well worth it when the mixes are done. 😊
He blew my mind with the H thing
Lemme edit your comment- HHHHHHe blew my mind with the H thing. Ok that’s better haha
It's a good thing to be aware of. But you shouldn't have to deal with it unless whoever edited it didn't do their job properly.
I was about to say that too! That is next level
How did that "blow your mind" this ability has been available since the inception of digital editing (dating back to the 90's). I am just in awe that he cared enough and took the time to fix it. It is stuff like that which defines a great engineer, Tony is a great engineer. The person who had it before Tony should have fixed it.
@@IDXNTNEED Show me exactly what I said that was "talking down to you"? If you thought it was interesting then why didn't you just say that?
Nonchalantly nails the edits first try like a boss.
I'm always amazed when I see how many vocal tracks are used.
I love how on point he is...
Had a good time watching that.
The mix sounds great, thank you sir
Holy moly this is brilliant
been badass since.. back in the day-,,the Master,,
The best audio engineer in the world.
Damn! I've been trying to improve my vocal processing. This helps so much!
Hey There! What a great sneak peek... Thank you! 🙌🏻
What a genius
Nice one’ watching on my break.
Does Maserati mix totally in the box now, or does he use a hybrid approach?
Tony is using the BF-76...goes to show we all have all the plugins we need to make great mixes. We just need his ears lol
Hi mix with the masters. When are you going bring one of gospel music mixing engineer on your show?
Yeah definitely...we need one
I’m gods time, I suppose 🤷🏿♂️
They be showing in box 📦 but really be out the box
Thanks a lot teacher nice one
Why don't we see the Waves Maserati vocal plug in? Isn't that supposed to be something like a "one-stop shop" for mixing vocals?
Good god this guy’s editing skills lmao.
South africa in the comments 🙏🙏
Interesting but not a heck of a lot about the actual lead vocal chain though.
Where was the vocal chain? 👀
I was looking for the same aux , let me show you 4th grade tricks lol
Exactly!!
I noticed the tracks look like a limiter was used on every single one of the tracks, is that correct?
Damn he's good! lol
Song is Catchy Tho..😀
The key is, the less is more!
WOW...!!!
HOW did he do that
He's Tony fucking Maserati, that's how
Skills #period
🙉🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥
💨🚀🚀🚀
🙏🙏
👑🙌🏾
💡🎖🧠
👍💯
Masterclass but then they start mixing with 3rd party plugins.
What an awful song, imagine opening this project up and having to listen to it
Half the video is showing Maserati editing -- what a waste of time!
But I enjoy the editing of masseratis!
This song is horrid.
everyone using sound toys?
Pretty much everyone except me
@@zachary963 what do you use in place of those
I noticed the tracks look like a limiter was used on every single one of the tracks, is that correct?
I think it's just because you can zoom in on the stems that they look like that so I don't think they're actually limited (but I could be wrong)
He magnified the waveforms, likely to make it more visible where certain parts are. If you look to the left at the audiometers per channel you'll see they're nowhere near 0dB.
I tend to magnify the waveforms myself too when mixing, just purely to make navigating through a large session quicker.