I appreciate your feedback! I've used this method for years, but when I compared it to the original version, which I mixed by ear, I was pretty shocked. almost similar results
Awesome. Only Problem with this method is that pink noise has a slope of -3db per octave, whereas music mostly follows a profile of -4.5db. I guess that's the reason why Pro Audio Engineers usually don't use this method... 🤔
Thank you for the the input. Regardless of technical limitations, by considering some of the points mentioned in the video, you can achieve quite good results. The goal is to mix everything by ear, and at the very least, it provids you a solid starting point. We won't solely rely on this, however. Additionally, based on the genre, we may want some elements to stand out in the mix by being louder.
@@yeckxo Exactly. I'm mostly mixing Metal and other very dense material where you don't even need artificial noise to balance. Drums are upfront, the rest you mix in a way everything is audible at some point, Voila. 😉 Anyway, I want to mention "Ceilings of Sound", some sort of a different type of EQ, which is working with all sorts of slope profiles, for me this was actually a step up in mixing by considering targets profiles etc. instead of simple EQ-moves. There's still so much to learn... But who is asking if it sounds good? 😁
@@eccentricworx Ayaic plugins are truly remarkable, though slightly underappreciated. I'm unsure of their popularity, but they are undeniably valuable tools.