I will do anything to make the track sound great. If this includes losing the challenge, I am okay with that.
To me, there's no difference between passing the provided bass track through my own amp sim with a fuzz pedal and adding my own samples to the live drums, yet apparently there's no controversy about the former technique and a lot about the later. If my mix is bad, it is bad no matter where I place most of the processing, or whatever extra stuff I add. I use a lot of processes in parallel that go to the 2bus, and multiple plugins of the same kind doing a little work each. Should I use multiple instances of the same plugin across different tracks instead?
It is publicly known that legit pro mixers use these techniques everyday, even before triggers were a thing. To me it is not cheating, as you can royally screw up your mixes doing that. Same goes for the 2bus processing. Cheating would be using a "magic tool" that makes your mix better no matter what, but the client decides subjectively, so there's no such thing. It all depends on my taste, talent and experience when doing these techniques. There's no "super sample" that will fit itself flawlessly into the mix right off the bat.
If I'm wrong, please somebody tell me what's the one trick that will make every client choose my mix over the others 100% of the time. (I'll probably use it!
