Post
by -[2]DAY_- » Thu Mar 17, 2011 3:03 pm
louder doesnt always mean heavier. but raising elements for example the sub, but 1 or 2 Db at the drop definitely brings the extra presence.
Its all about arrangement imo. In my tunes i like to set a pace with a beat+ riff or atmosphere, and if theres sub then its very low in the mix. I mix the tune minimally and sparsely adding a couple elements to that bed and pace i've set. Often with layered drums, i only go with one or two layers (out of a possible 3 or 4), for the intro. usually the tighter upper layers with less body. Introduce the meaty bottom end kick and 200Hz punchy snare layer at the drop.
I like the beat to do a stutter, fill, or sudden halt, with some automated delays kicking in so some shit echoes over the silence, then a crecendo of some kind. Be it a filter sweep, cymbal roll, pad, riser, fade in, whatever. just crecendo like half a bar, a bar, then boom
On the drop, throw in the kitchen sink. Every element and every layer that has been layed down for it, goes. From there, its variation, call/response, the rest of arrangement stuff which is up to ur own taste n skillz.
That is how I do things, anyways... just one guys approach
As far as heavy b-lines not overpowering the tune.... thats proper mixing. Lots of material on that in this forum and elsewhere