Re: Mix Challenge - General Gossip Thread
Posted: Fri Mar 21, 2025 02:16 CET
Hi All,
I have an idea that I'd like to run past those running the Mix Challenge. At present it seems that only the top 15 mixes get feedback. This is understandable due to time considerations however it means that those not selected (the vast majority) don't get feedback, and yet they're the ones that probably need it most.
So, I was thinking that a more structured mix evaluation process could help in two ways - firstly, all entrants would get some feedback, and secondly, the person evaluating the mix would have a clear method that they could use which might even make the process quicker.
I was thinking of something like the following. Have a set of criteria that the song provider uses to evaluate the mixes and rate these criteria for each mix. As an example:
Tonal Balance
Internal Balances
Dynamics/Transient Clarity
Imaging
Aesthetic Choices (e.g. dry/wet, etc.)
These criteria are just examples of what I would use and are what a mastering engineer would initially listen for. The song provider would listen to each mix and rate each of the categories (say, out of 10). For example:
Mix 1
=====
Tonal Balance 6
Internal Balances 4
Dynamics/Transient Clarity 7
Imaging 5
Aesthetic Choices 8
Total: 30
At the end of the listening process, the top scoring mixes would go through to the second round.
So why would this be useful? I think for two reasons. In a lot of cases I imagine that the song provider isn't a mixer (they're songwriters/musicians?) so having some objective criteria would help them to identify particular mix characteristics that they might not be aware of. And if they're thinking in terms of specific criteria they might only need to listen to the mix once.
Secondly, it would really help those of us who don't make the second round. Say a mix gets a 2/10 for tonal balance and one of the top 15 gets 9/10. The person who mixed the 2/10 mix could listen to the 9/10 mix and identify the tonal differences. This would be a huge help!
Anyway, that's my 2c! I'm interested in hearing what others think about this idea.
Cheers!
I have an idea that I'd like to run past those running the Mix Challenge. At present it seems that only the top 15 mixes get feedback. This is understandable due to time considerations however it means that those not selected (the vast majority) don't get feedback, and yet they're the ones that probably need it most.
So, I was thinking that a more structured mix evaluation process could help in two ways - firstly, all entrants would get some feedback, and secondly, the person evaluating the mix would have a clear method that they could use which might even make the process quicker.
I was thinking of something like the following. Have a set of criteria that the song provider uses to evaluate the mixes and rate these criteria for each mix. As an example:
Tonal Balance
Internal Balances
Dynamics/Transient Clarity
Imaging
Aesthetic Choices (e.g. dry/wet, etc.)
These criteria are just examples of what I would use and are what a mastering engineer would initially listen for. The song provider would listen to each mix and rate each of the categories (say, out of 10). For example:
Mix 1
=====
Tonal Balance 6
Internal Balances 4
Dynamics/Transient Clarity 7
Imaging 5
Aesthetic Choices 8
Total: 30
At the end of the listening process, the top scoring mixes would go through to the second round.
So why would this be useful? I think for two reasons. In a lot of cases I imagine that the song provider isn't a mixer (they're songwriters/musicians?) so having some objective criteria would help them to identify particular mix characteristics that they might not be aware of. And if they're thinking in terms of specific criteria they might only need to listen to the mix once.
Secondly, it would really help those of us who don't make the second round. Say a mix gets a 2/10 for tonal balance and one of the top 15 gets 9/10. The person who mixed the 2/10 mix could listen to the 9/10 mix and identify the tonal differences. This would be a huge help!
Anyway, that's my 2c! I'm interested in hearing what others think about this idea.
Cheers!