Reminded of the Paris mojo firsthand [message #103941] |
Sun, 09 August 2009 09:42 |
pbraun
Messages: 63 Registered: June 2009 Location: Northwest Indiana
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I just got done helping a couple of friends record their new album. Everything was tracked and mixed in Cubase.
I've always read here about the difference between summing in Paris and summing completely natively.
Now I really understand.
The songs they recorded that feature only a small handful of tracks sound cleaner, more "open".
The ones with a lot more instrumentation, not so much. Even the ones that start off simpler -- as soon as the rest of the tracks come in, the mix gets muddier and more constricted. I was wondering what the difference was, then suddenly it occurred to me that what you've been saying about summing was the cause of this.
Really an eye-opener.
Paul Braun, Certified Music Junkie
"Music washes from the soul the dust of everyday life." -- Harlan Howard
[Updated on: Sun, 09 August 2009 21:25] Report message to a moderator
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Re: Reminded of the Paris mojo first hand [message #103944 is a reply to message #103943] |
Sun, 09 August 2009 10:34 |
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You got it, Paul - the word that consistently keeps coming up in "ten year later" analysis of what's going on inside PARIS is "headroom". Headroom for miles, even (or maybe "particularly") in comparison with the best of today's offerings.
Welcome to the forums, glad you found us!
- Kerry
"... being bitter is like swallowing poison and waiting for the other guy to die..." - anon
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