AeneA- A really awesome band I just mixed, mastered, reamped

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lolzgreg

lolzgreg

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Hey everyone,

A lot of you guys may know that I do audio production; it's pretty much my life, and nothing is more rewarding or awesome to me.

I just finished up reamping, mixing, and mastering a band called AeneA toward the end of May, and their Perennial EP is now streaming and available for purchase on bandcamp.

Check them out if you like progressive metal with modern metal elements.

http://aenea.bandcamp.com/album/perennial-e-p

This is my best work, and some really awesome music, so please, check it out!

Special thanks to Kyle Odell and Jeff Dunne for editing duties.

If anyone has any questions about the production, let me know, and I'd be glad to answer.

Cheers,

Greg
 
Sounds great man, great job. But i I hate the vocals. :D
 
Now that's some sick fucking production! You did a really killer job on that, Greg!

danyeo":3ui9y4qe said:
Sounds great man, great job. But i I hate the vocals. :D

Geezer
 
pretty cool, - has a cynic // obscura vibe to the music with some other elements thrown in , sounds good too
 
awesome greg! is the studio yours? some pics of the studio? :)
 
I'm working on getting the studio aesthetically impressive enough to post pictures. It won't be much longer. I'm also not a photographer, so I'm working on it.
 
I'm actually just painting my home studio and putting in the floor this week. Can you offer any tips on what you have found to make the biggest difference in your setup ? The foo Fighters recorded their latest album in a garrage and mixed in a room for god's sakes so it can be done. I know acoustic tiles and bass frequency absorption is important but what about a good preamp etc..?I'm pretty much starting with a presonus firepod and mics but i have been reading some good thing about more recent budget minded preamps with a channel or two that provide a nice clear signal for vocals.
 
Your room can make or break your setup; a lot of people mix in untreated rooms, but the positioning of their monitoring within the room, and the actual dimensions of the room make a tremendous difference. Your best bet is to bass-trap the corners, and move your speakers around the room until you get a relatively honest representation of the frequency spectrum that would benefit mixing. Once you take your first burned CD out to the car, and things sound balanced, you know you're in good shape.

If you tell me your budget, we can talk about gear.

Cheers,

Greg
 
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