03-08-2019, 02:44 PM
I have heard the argument that you should mix for what most people listens on, which may be good advice.
Mixing for phone earbuds and blutooth-speakers might be a smart idea.
I'm of the older generation though, so I don't listen to music that way myself, so it would take some getting used to if I should begin to do that
I use studio-monitors and studio-headphones, but of course not many 'normal' people use such things.
I don't know the smartest route to take. If I did I would be rich and famous lol
I do prefer the final sound to reflect the recording though, which is why I mentioned the thing about it being recorded in a LIVE-session.
The LIVE-albums I listen to myself always have a distinctly different sound to them than the same artists' studio-albums. Maybe it's not intentional by those who made them, but that's what I've gotten used to over the years (but of course; no rules are truly rigid)
Yes, laziness is rarely leading to good things
But as said; I do like your mix
Mixing for phone earbuds and blutooth-speakers might be a smart idea.
I'm of the older generation though, so I don't listen to music that way myself, so it would take some getting used to if I should begin to do that
I use studio-monitors and studio-headphones, but of course not many 'normal' people use such things.
I don't know the smartest route to take. If I did I would be rich and famous lol
I do prefer the final sound to reflect the recording though, which is why I mentioned the thing about it being recorded in a LIVE-session.
The LIVE-albums I listen to myself always have a distinctly different sound to them than the same artists' studio-albums. Maybe it's not intentional by those who made them, but that's what I've gotten used to over the years (but of course; no rules are truly rigid)
Yes, laziness is rarely leading to good things
But as said; I do like your mix
Software I make: https://www.jelstudio.dk/JELSTUDIO_software.html
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