Hey Chris, I think you described me in a lot of what you wrote just
there. Now I've been working on all of this for over a couple of
decades and I'm still working on it, but let me tell you
something.Firstly, it's not about the gear and the amount of money we
spend. I've spent way too much money
Agree with the below 1000%!
Practice practice practice. Train your ears to recognize various parts of
the audible spectrum too. 150 HZ sounds like this, 1.5K sounds like this,
8K sounds like this etc. You can do that sort of practice with just about
any music or pink noise, and whatever EQ you
I'm not going to comment too much on this thread as it's not specifically about
Pro Tools itself. There's been, is and always will be tons of advice thrown
around, some of it viable and some of it nonsense. What I'm about to say is not
advice. It's pure fact, plain and simple. You can practice
Hey,
Can you give me a link to that Recording Lounge thing you all were talking
about? I'd really love to check it out! Also, have any of you heard of
Home Studio Corner?
http://www.homestudiocorner.com
This guy's apparently out of Nashville, and he's done a whole 2 or so hour
long corse
Chris,
None of us are perfect. If we truly admit it, we are all still learning this
thing called audio production. You are doing the best thing you can do for
yourself right now. If you really want to learn this stuff, you have to got to
invest in training as it looks like now you have done.
Recording lounge (which btw was the first google result for “recording lounge
podcast”) I have Joe Gilder’s Understanding compression and some other
tutorials free and paid and i think this one is by far my favorite primer on
compression now.
http://recordinglounge.blogspot.com
Also Mixing