An Indie Musician's Diary VOL...

By ElisabethKitzing

319 0 6

This is how I go forward with my music - the real story from November 2017 and towards the album release but... More

Intro
Contact
November 30, 2017: CCLI (Registering Music)
December 1, 2017: Friday & Black Friday Music Deals
December 2, 2017 Advent, Alternate Chords & Baking
Sunday December 3, 2017: The Importance of Resting In God
Monday December 4, 2017: Understanding the Mastering Process
December 5, 2017: Professional Vocal Tips
Dec 6, Christmas Party
Dec 7th: CCLI and STIM
Dec 8: Reference Tracks/MagicAB
Dec 11: Mondays: :-( or :-)
Dec 12 Christmas, Candy & Plugins
Dec 13 Lucia Day & Getting Low End Frequencies Right
Dec 15 Music Theory
Dec 16: Mixing vs. Mastering
Dec 18: Pebble Bread & Music Theory for Producers
Dec 19: Vision for 2018
Dec 30: End of the Year Stuff
Dec 31: Making a "One Page"
Jan 2nd: Stats, Strategies & Updates
Jan 3: Learning Piano, Ending Excuses
Set Lists, the Renaissance Plugin & Gain Staging
Jan 5th: Construction and Compression
Frustration, Real Success & How to Finish a Mix
House Concerts, Udemy & Ari
Worship Nights & Gain Staging Continued
Jan 10 + 11th: Life is ....
Jan 15: Networking
Jan 16: Cold in the Studio
Jan 17th: Sick but still kicking
18 -21/Jan: Minds.com & Refreshing Featherheadmedia.com
Jan 22-26 Sinus Pain and Sinus Curves
27Jan - 1 Feb: CDBaby, Reverb & Album Art
2 Feb -8th : The Round Up
11 Feb - Update
14 -20th Feb.: Wunderlist +
Audio Work Structure/Indie Burnout
March 7 - 9th The Vine Update, Clip Gain & Reverb
March 10 - 16: Pink Noise, Sub bass etc
March 20 - The Two Ditches of Music Production
March 21 - Making Mixes Believable Using Reverb
March 22 & 23 - Panning & Automation
March 24- 26 Progress & the Fear of Failure
28th March: Exporting/Bouncing, Landr & Loudness
March 29 - Amuse, triads, vocal widening
March 30: Cleanup
March 31: Indie Music Financing, Product Strategy and Other "Stuff"
3- 4 April: Indie Depression vs. Balance & Superfans
Chit Chat in The Studio, Bass Multiple Compression, Shaping & more
Scotland & Mixing/Mastering Faster
Song Structure and EQ- cut/boost?
Should You, a Robot or a Professional Master Your Album?
Songwriting Development
Growing A Community
Audio Fixes
The 5 Second Rule, Vulnerability & Saturation
Finishing a mix & mastering tips
Make Your Music the Cream in Someone's Coffee
Shout Outs, Panning, Life, Death & Taxes
Indie Music Videos
Collaboration & Pro Tips for Making Music
Making Indie Music Videos Inexpensively
Even Elon Musk thinks Indie Musicians are Paid Too Little
Loudness Wars
I've Learned Not to Overdo Mixing
Think Auxes, Sends, Busses in Logic Pro X are Confusing? You're Not Alone
Indie Album Promotion Tips
Getting Paid for Your Music
Reverb is a big topic
Doing an Outdoor Photo Shoot for Promotion
May 26th: Vocal Effects
Mixing On Small Speakers
Reverb vs. Delay on Vocals
Planning an Album Release
Contacting Gatekeepers Sucessfully
Preparing Your Master for Replication on CDs
Mastering an album in Logic Pro X
Warning for Indie Songwriters/Musicians on YouTube
Adding the human touch to Midi Piano
Getting Indie Music Licensed
Indie Music Rights
Choosing a Mastering Studio & The Shadow of Fear
Finding Your Sound & Reference Songs for Mastering
The Vine & Summer Stress: July 7th 2018
Taking My Daily Vitamin
Getting a Wider Sounding Mix
*****Reference Track Tips
Signal Chain Hierarchy & Loudness Penalty App
Mastering Alternatives
Monetize Your Lyrics
Recording, Mixing, Panning & Automating Guitars
Backup and Maintence
Having fun
Submitting Music to Radio Stations
Using Reference Tracks To Check Sonic Consistency
Mastering the Album
Collaboration
Building an email list
Album Cover Design
Artist Profile on Streaming Services
Soundcloud Tips
Mixing Vocals
Income Through Sync Licensing
Sept 26th: Got Music Theory?
Referencing, Side Chaining Vocal Effects
Thickening My Soprano
Automate, Then Compress Vocals
"Just Do It"; Coolgram Matrixes for Promos & Split Processing,
MONO check
Acoustic Guitar Recording Tips
I WANT TO QUIT But the "why" keeps me going
Last Chapter in Volume 1: Delay vs. Reverb

About Recording & Mixing Guitars

12 0 0
By ElisabethKitzing

May 18th Update: I just got three of the twelve premastering mixes completely done through working together with PG Imsen (the coproducer) online. He was sitting in Gothenburg and I was here in the Southern part of Sweden and we fixed things in his Cubase version together. It's great to be able to work this way. An hour or two here an there, and we've been able to update all three so I can finally say that those tracks are completely ready for mastering. YAY! I wrote more in depth about this and life in general on my blog on www.featherheadmedia.com

Unfortunately, I have to pay him on an hourly basis as well. (He's worth it.) Want to help me do this blog and make new music? Why not become a Patreon patron. Here's the link: https://www.patreon.com/elisabethkitzing Thanks!

I love guitars. On the Change My Mind album, I have guitars on all of the tracks. Getting them to sound great is an artform which I am still trying to perfect. Here are some of the things I've learned along the way. 

Guitar headaches

If there is one instrument that I haven't really been able to tame yet it is the sound of my guitars while recording. The room isn't acoustically treated yet so I can't use amps on my electric guitar, my acoustic guitar reflects off the walls and using a direct cable to record them has its problems too. I am almost never satisfied with the sound I have in my mixes, no matter how much I fix and trix with my vamps and plugins. I'm getting ever closer to what I hear in my head, but I'm not there. I have found that I can fix some of those issues with what I have available at home, sort of, but I never really get the sound I want. So I took a day to look at what I can still do about it and this chapter is the result. Of course there is much more to be said about this but this is a start. I hope it helps you, too.

The video on the top: addresses the issue of frequencies that should be swept and destroyed and goes through proper compression settings. 

EQ: Jason Moss says that there are two areas to watch out for are the lower mids at about 150 to 350 Hz. (especially acoustic guitars). Boominess can be found here. Also around 2 - 4 kHz, the upper mids (often acoustic guitars) , you can often find problems - frequencies that sound harsh and tinny (especially electric guitars). So, sweep around and take 'em down. (Do so in the context of the mix.) 

He uses a sweep and destroy setting on an EQ with these values: single band; +18 dB gain; Q = 8; Frequency 10Hz.

Compress carefully: Another thing he mentions here is the importance of applying the compressor correctly. If you attack time is too fast you can lose your punch when fingerpicking acoustic guitars. Most ppl over compress their electric guitars, too. Be careful always. 

A great article about recording guitar: 

https://www.soundonsound.com/techniques/recording-acoustic-guitar  - Read it if you are aguitarist. It is deep. 

Musician on a mission gives you these 7 tips: 

1. Never EQ a guitar in solo. Always do it within the context of the mix. 

2. Mute unnecessary channels and/or unnecessary parts before you start enhancing anything. You NEVER need,  at most, more than two guitars playing the same thing. If you have two. Let one guitar play the lower part and another play the melodic part. This is something I've had to correct in my mixes. I had two acoustic guitars, one left and right, and two electric guitars, one left and one right - ALL playing the same exact chords in the same exact positions. This has made my mixed muddy and cause phase issues as well. It's called growing up. 

3. Balance the guitar parts against each other and make sure that they don't distract from the lead vocals AND no too quiet so that they get lost in the mix. 

4. Process the group on a mixed bus to save time and CPU unless they need to be treated separately.

Generally you want to use a slower attack time on the guitars unless it is a really aggressive guitarist who is picking too hard. 

5. Don't be afraid to cut the high mids and the lows aggressively! He recommends cutting the highs above 10 kHz on an electric guitar. (Anything above 5 kHz you don't really need.) Less high end is experienced by the listener as moving something farther away, i.e. giving the guitars a place further back and respectively moving the vocals forward. (You can even cut the highs on your reverbs to get them to move backwards in the mix). 

6. Don't be afraid to boost the upper mids. But if you do, you may have to lay in a cut a bit higher or lower to compensate for the additional dB.

Practice makes perfect: So, I went into the song I was mixing and went through the guitars, one by one to check in context the things mentioned in both videos. I have already done this before (in solo during the prep stage) so it was just a last check to see if I hear anything crazy stuff going on before I say I am done with the mix. 

Amp Simulators

Today many people use amp simulators on their tracks. It's easier than setting up a mic and less expensive than all those foot pedals and cables. But it can sound wrong. Deathly wrong. In my effort to find why my guitars sound tiny I watched this. Really good video. Check it out. 

Guitar Tips

BTW: a great way to avoid many of the problems with recording guitars is to read this article from ReverbNation before you start:

http://blog.reverbnation.com/2018/05/16/10-things-to-do-before-recording-guitar/?utm_source=newsletter&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=an-2018-05-16-recording-guitar

After all, getting a great recording from the start is like pulling together great raw ingredients for a chef about to make a great meal. So, take time to make sure that everything is in order before you record. This will make mixing so much easier! 

And here are some good warm ups for you as a guitarist

https://www.guitarplayer.com/technique/warm-up-time-11-exercises-that-will-help-you-play-even-better

That's all for today.

For more info: 

Subscribe to my homepage: www.featherheadmedia.com

Digital TipJar: digitaltipjar.com (elisabeth kitzing)

Twitter: ekitzing

Facebook page for indie producers/musicians: Featherhead media

Inquiries: info


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