1. mix in mono - i don't, but i remember to check in mono, to make sure it makes sense. 2. get it right at the source. if the source is crap, no amount of mixing or processing will fix it. 3. at barely audible volumes, you should at least hear the drums and vocals - and i will add at least a minimum sense of the harmony and energy, maybe some main supporting lines. 4. hi-pass the hi-hats, it would have never occurred to me - i mean they're hi freq information, right, what's to high-pass? wrong. there's still a lot of rumble that you're not even aware of, that cleans up your drums instantly. 5. a confidence that you can do it with a minimum setup. on the other hand, that my might be a trap, depending on what you deem to be a minimum setup. there are some minimum setups that just don't cut it, and it's not necessarily about the cost, just the quality, and if you're unaware, you'll have years of breaching principle no. 2 - a bad source to begin with. now, for fairness, some stuff i didn't agree on at all: 1. cut a bad frequency on one guitar, and boost it on its counterpart, in a left-right guitar setup, to get width. you get the width, but it's very unbalanced, and you end up boosting exactly the freqs that you want to cut, on one of the guitars. 2. minimize the impact of the verse, to cheat the listener into thinking the chorus is bigger. if that's the receipt, killing half your song, to just falsely create the impression of greatness in the other half, you might as well not bother recording the verse, just get to the chorus. i know it's a trendy concept, but i find it's disrespectful to the listener and to the music. your song, ideally, is not just a chorus. if it is, only record the chorus, mix it well, and get it over with. and if that's what you need to make the chorus pop, then you're doing it wrong. not to mention, with the amount of compression people use these days, you may kill your whole song before the chorus, and it still won't pop, anyway. i hear it every day. but graham was definitely my main source for mixing knowledge early on. and i really appreciate it.
Graham was the pioneer posting videos on YTube about studio recordings for free! Because of this guy many others started doing the same thing. He deserves our support and respect for everything he did and still doing! I hope he's doing well.
Mixing in mono is one of my favorite mix tricks. However, I thank Graham specially for making me believe I could do good-sounding music from home and with my current equipment.
GREAT! I am a fan of you Joe since a long time (because of Studio One and also with yours album songs! "Better this way", "indiana"...), ans I suscribeto Recording Revolution too! Both are very helpfull for musicians and homestudio lovers!👍🏻🙏🏻 thanks for all tutorials and songs!🙏🏻 jean-marc (France)
Firstly, the inverse square law, why you shouldn't stand so close to the mic. Secondly, don't worry about what you do or do not have, get to work. Skills are more important than gear or tech. The quickest way to attain those skills is to work and you can always gain and incorporate better gear and tech later. That's what I learned from Graham.
I learned very quickly not to take much of anything he said too seriously because many of his opinions were at best apocryphal and at worst, they were complete disinformation and erroneous. But hey... it is what it is.
I think you need to put on a pair of good headphones and re-evaluate whether you actually made the bass sound better when you turned that EQ off... to me in my DT1990's it sounded much better with the EQ on.
How about staying on a specific Daw as you do videos for this channel ? whats the majority like for the DaW so it might be a huge help and engagement thank You!
You and Graham helped start my carrier. I remember back when you still wore glasses! so many great tutorials I have bought over the years that I would watch over and over just to remind me of the mindset to use. now I do this full time! you guys are the best
Graham showed me that it sounds far more personable to call people "Friend". I don't know if he says it IRL but it definitely works well on youtube 🙂 Also, I learnt a lot of tips from him about how to mix a song in his mixing series. Enjoying these videos too, thanks Joe!
Being a long time fan of both of you, I had to research HEAVILY to find all the episodes of Simply Recording Podcast. First 7 are very hard to find. Could you please reupload all the episodes of the podcast to Spotify please?
@@endlichjura I don't remember, Googled like crazy. It was 1-2 years ago. I have them as audio files. Could send them to you, if Joe and Graham wouldn't mind.
The bright speaker thing gets me. Too often those brighter ones are mushing all the different high bands into a sizzle so it's impossible to hear if there's any air above the brightness. Same with audio interfaces - I've known people pick the converter that was audibly distorting in the highs.
I have missed something. When I first started, some four years ago, I watched Graham and joined RR. I got discouraged and quit it all for about a year, but recently returned. You are a new face. I have to find out what happened, but I have to say I've watched just two of your videos now and am WOWED by your expertise and your presentation style. I've got a little research to do!
I am 57 and learned Studio one form your channel.Thank you Joe. Recently my voice has changed and i find i'm singing a word flat here and there, as one of my favorite singers, do you have any advice as to how rto rectify this?
I loved his simple, straightforward approach, went with a basic Behringer interface and mic setup and it sounds just fine for 100.00 . The C-1 mic is pretty "bright" but is plenty clear for acoustic guitar and vocals. it picks up my guitar's low end quiet well. I think also going back to the mix a day or two later prevents auditory burnout insanity syndrome.
At the thime I discovered Graham (probaly around 2012) I was in audio school and all they talk about was brands and studio equipment that I'm never going to afford to buy, Graham thought me about how you can make good recordings with the gear you have, most important thing is the song, not so much the tools.
I had no clue where to start and thank God I found Recording Revolution. I started my home studio following every piece of advice Graham gave. If he suggested the Focusrite Scarlett Solo - that's what I got! Etc. Thank you Graham for all your advice and guidance and inspiration! And thank you Joe for taking over and running with it!
Happy to see this channel getting revamped. I found Graham years ago, his delivery made things easy for me to understand, he definitely got me thinking about signal flow and gain staging also gave me an overall good understanding of DAWs.
My journey to recording my own songs actually started with Joe and Graham and was really successful, thanks to both of them. I binge watched their videos, learned a lot but more so by joining their courses. That resumed to my 2 EPs and some published singles. I’m really glad, Joe took over ❤
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