Re: MIX CHALLENGE - MC080 September 2021 - Mix Round 2 temporarily stopped
Posted: Fri Oct 15, 2021 22:41 CEST
Sometimes "splitting" a track (or multing) is a valid means of editing. But you also have to keep in mind, that this can heavily influence the natural tone of a recording (as mentioned). Especially if it's a very instrument limited production like this.
A couple of go-to examples for this would be:
Vocals... you carefully slice the vocals and reduce certain sibilants/words words, and/or raise quiet words to make things a bit more up-front and personal. Less work on your signal processing array, right? But that alone is already a strong altering of the sound / natural performance and goes more towards surgical perfection.
Another example are "modern rock kit sounds", where you might slice up every hit, "strip silence" them, even quantize. Basically the same deal. You alter the groove in favor for perfection.
For guitars, it depends. Like... if the original had a one-take on certain settings. But now you have access to the DI and want to change up the tone a bit, see where this goes. You might cut away the solo and give it a different effect than the rhythm. That is a bit of a grey-zone, but not uncommon these days.
A totally different topic would be, if you copy parts to "double" them with additional sounds (prime example: bass processing a-la Tech21 Sansamp with blending a distorted and DI tone together), or maybe try ADT techniques.
The bottom line is this:
With such edits, you can make a very subtle performance easily bland and sterile. Wrong note in the arrangement? Just fix it - it will result in a better end-product, right? But does it really? You have to find a balance, fitting to the given production. And that only comes with experience.
A couple of go-to examples for this would be:
Vocals... you carefully slice the vocals and reduce certain sibilants/words words, and/or raise quiet words to make things a bit more up-front and personal. Less work on your signal processing array, right? But that alone is already a strong altering of the sound / natural performance and goes more towards surgical perfection.
Another example are "modern rock kit sounds", where you might slice up every hit, "strip silence" them, even quantize. Basically the same deal. You alter the groove in favor for perfection.
For guitars, it depends. Like... if the original had a one-take on certain settings. But now you have access to the DI and want to change up the tone a bit, see where this goes. You might cut away the solo and give it a different effect than the rhythm. That is a bit of a grey-zone, but not uncommon these days.
A totally different topic would be, if you copy parts to "double" them with additional sounds (prime example: bass processing a-la Tech21 Sansamp with blending a distorted and DI tone together), or maybe try ADT techniques.

With such edits, you can make a very subtle performance easily bland and sterile. Wrong note in the arrangement? Just fix it - it will result in a better end-product, right? But does it really? You have to find a balance, fitting to the given production. And that only comes with experience.