Hell, I don't even know where to start. I've read a little and watched some videos here and there, but there's so much more to it than my limited knowledge. I CAN hear a good mix though.
I've gotten better at finding places in the mix for instruments to sit, but it all still seems to be confined in a narrower frequency band and not pulled forward, loud, and balanced like you get. I even put something I did up in Winamp with yours playing and I can barely hear anything in mine. I get the concept of compressing and limiting, but I don't think I have a workable knowledge of it.
Do you put a compressor or limiter on individual tracks and then on top of the final mix?
Double tracking is something I don't do much of. Do you pan your double tracks hard left and right? Whenever I have done it, it always sounds best hard left and right, if not, I can get some phasing issues or something.
I think the EQ thing is my biggest frustration. Making the bass louder in the mix just makes the bass louder without really adding more bass. It just makes it louder, but not fuller or bigger. I know that makes no sense, but that's the only way I can describe. I struggle with getting some nice highs too. Similarly in the way with the lows...getting more in there just makes it treblier, but not expanding their presence. Hard to describe this stuff.
So you put a master EQ on the master? I haven't really tried that. Perhaps that helps? I put a compressor on it, but sometimes it makes it fade in and out and makes it woofy sounding. Again, I don't have a good working knowledge of compressing a mix.
But yeah, I'm sure even with tons of knowledge, there is no substitute for sitting down and doing it. My stuff does sound better than it used to, but it's still not "quality" yet. It's a slow process, it seems.
Any tidbits would be greatly appreciated. I know why those guys get paid the big bucks though. It's a science and it's an art.