You’re about the only one who has mentioned stereo panning ! And you have not tried to sell me a dogie plug in 😊 I get bored after 20 minutes but you kept me watching along !
Thank you so much! This is the type of content I needed at the moment as I'm starting to produce my own music: easy to understand, straight to the point and to follow along! So many video out there show the workflow with fancy third party plugins, but it makes no sense to spend all that money when you need to learn in the first place. Stock plugins are already fine and get the job done! Looking forward to the second part, so far it was very helpful 👏 Also the song is really cool, hat off to the artist.
Amazing video thank’s! Is there a reason there is no MIDI before beginning the mix? Do you convert everything in audio somehow? Also I didn’t get the part of stereo panning: how do you know on which instrument to do it stereo? If I play only plugins via midi should I stay with standard mono paning? Thank you again for your great work!
@@foals77 hey! Glad you liked the video. I’ll usually convert to midi to mix if either 1) the session is too heavy on processing, audio is much easier on the CPU, or 2) the production session is overly complicated or I need to mentally separate production from mixing. It’s not required at all, just something I do sometimes to keep things clean and efficient. I only reach for stereo panning if I’m trying to preserve some sort of specific wideness of the stereo channel. Say I recorded a guitar with a ping pong delay that bounces left and right, if I were to use the “balance” pan knob, it would turn down one side and turn up the other messing up that delay. The stereo pan lets you place both sides of the stereo image where you want. If you’re not sure, just leave it on balance! Hope that makes sense!
What part of this video was the most eye-opening? Let me know below!
Ahh thank you for the video ! I am still watching - 👀 🥰
@@chrubyglad you liked it!
You’re about the only one who has mentioned stereo panning ! And you have not tried to sell me a dogie plug in 😊 I get bored after 20 minutes but you kept me watching along !
I think the pacing of this tutorial is the most impressive and it’s all finally sinking in as I’am mix one of my old tracks I never finished mixing 😊
Woohoo! Love to hear it. Thanks again for watching
@@woodyardmusicwill email it over in the next few weeks and you can critique it ,if you like 👍🏻
Thank you so much! This is the type of content I needed at the moment as I'm starting to produce my own music: easy to understand, straight to the point and to follow along! So many video out there show the workflow with fancy third party plugins, but it makes no sense to spend all that money when you need to learn in the first place. Stock plugins are already fine and get the job done! Looking forward to the second part, so far it was very helpful 👏 Also the song is really cool, hat off to the artist.
Hey! Glad this was helpful! Part 2 should be out Tuesday or Friday this coming week! 😁
You are a great host and guide.Excellent channel.Thanks !
Thanks for watching!
Awesome content, keep up the good work! 😄
Thanks, I appreciate it!
AHHHH WHERE IS PART 2? 😫😫 You are such an amazing teacher ! 😊
Thank you! It should be out Tuesday!
Waiting for the next part 😍🥰
It’s going to come out Friday, behind on editing today 😅
Any mixing template for stock plugs , nice vlog
Thanks. All I have currently is a mastering template/preset on my website. If you want, send me a track, I’ll mix it and make a template/video of it
Amazing video thank’s!
Is there a reason there is no MIDI before beginning the mix? Do you convert everything in audio somehow?
Also I didn’t get the part of stereo panning: how do you know on which instrument to do it stereo? If I play only plugins via midi should I stay with standard mono paning?
Thank you again for your great work!
@@foals77 hey! Glad you liked the video. I’ll usually convert to midi to mix if either 1) the session is too heavy on processing, audio is much easier on the CPU, or 2) the production session is overly complicated or I need to mentally separate production from mixing. It’s not required at all, just something I do sometimes to keep things clean and efficient. I only reach for stereo panning if I’m trying to preserve some sort of specific wideness of the stereo channel. Say I recorded a guitar with a ping pong delay that bounces left and right, if I were to use the “balance” pan knob, it would turn down one side and turn up the other messing up that delay. The stereo pan lets you place both sides of the stereo image where you want. If you’re not sure, just leave it on balance! Hope that makes sense!
Ok great
Thank you so much for your detail answer!