I started mixing 8 years ago and take it a few years very seriously. I've read literature, was practicing a lot and found my own mixing-style. Since a few years I do this semi-professional and focused especially on mixing.
Furthermore I'm a drummer with overall 18 years of practice and 13 years band-experience in over 20 bands so far (now I'm 30).
Even if I master my mixes by myself, I do this in a second step and render the mix exactly in the manner for the challenge here. I.e. with a few dB of headroom and far away from common loudness levels like -14 LUFS (Spotify, Youtube, ...). This leads me to my next point:
@Mikael
This is a mix challenge and usually mixes are delivered to mastering-studios within the given boundaries of this challenge. Every mastering-engineer wants a non-limited mix with enough headroom. So the rules are simply a guide for a professional workflow. Just in my opinion ...
This isn't my first mix-contest in general and at first I was 'amazed' about the detailed and strict rules here, too. But I think this is very reasonable and the whole challenge seems very professional to me. You should appreciate the opportunity ... just in my opinion.
![Wink ;)](./images/smilies/icon_wink.gif)
@Oba Ozai
I've heard your mix. For detailed analytics I took the first instrumental refrain and compared it with my mix - after loudness-normalization and with an analyzer ...
Average frequency spectrum (first refrain):
Your mix - https://www.dropbox.com/s/utcogwr5m7q9s ... n.jpg?dl=0
My mix - https://www.dropbox.com/s/wd62vreyftmax ... n.jpg?dl=0
My mix for comparison:
https://www.dropbox.com/s/etdnmrnplg1f4 ... e.wav?dl=0
Voxengo SPAN is a free VST-plugin, by the way:
https://www.voxengo.com/product/span/
The main problem, especially with the low-end, is the negative correlation of your left and right channel (Correlation meter of the analyzer). Negative values means the side-signal is louder than the mid-signal and vice versa. The mid-signal is the mono-content in the center and exactly the same on both speakers. The side-signal is the difference of the channels and disappears in mono.
But this doesn't only affect the mono-compatibility. The bass-frequencies contain the most energy of the spectrum ... thus they're mostly panned in the center, to spread the bass-energy evenly on both speakers.
The 'industry standard' for panning is since a few decades: kick, snare, bass and lead-vocal in the center - 0% panning.
Usually the correlation of the channels should be between +0.5 and +1 and certainly not in the negative area. You rarely find professional mixes with lower values than +0.5.
Your mix has only negative values, my mix only values over +0.5.
Another important point are the balances - and this often is underestimated by novice. Your mix is very unbalanced. The lead-guitar in this part is too quiet and the rhythm section is too dominant. You can also see this in the frequency spectrum of the analyzer.
The Kickdrum is 'ducking' or 'pumping' your whole mix, by the way. But this isn't an EDM track. Even ducking the bass by the kick via sidechain-compression is an artistic thing only, in my opinion. I want the kickdrum and bass to play simultaneously. But this is also a matter of taste.
@Mister Fox
Why I use dither on 24bit export is a good question. I know about the noisefloor of 24bit and 16bit and the hearing range for music (which is about 60dB). Even the noisefloor of my mixes exceeds the -96dBFS of 16bit, because of my analog-style plugins.
I think it's an innocent habit. But thank you for the hint ... I should restrict dithering to 16bit exports again.
![Smile :)](./images/smilies/icon_smile.gif)