Jump to content

AntiRellik

Members
  • Posts

    3
  • Joined

  • Last visited

AntiRellik's Achievements

Newbie

Newbie (1/14)

  1. It's possible to separate each channel into its own effects chain in the mixer. Click on the channel you want to route, press F9 to open the mixer and then right click an instance/channel in the mixer and in the menu select Link selected channels -> To this track but I don't think you can route each instrument within the VST to a seperate mixer though. I haven't tried hard enough to find a way or researched about it Each time I want to route different instruments to its own mixer track I just open another instance of EWQLSO, Kontakt or GPO. It has never bothered me though, but it would be useful if somebody knew a way to route it in the way you're saying.
  2. Thanks a lot for your responses! Greatly helpful, I'll be playing around with my stuff now and see what kind of results I get. I've noticed a lot of commercial tracks that clip a little around everywhere! Thats why I always have Winamp a little equalized and at 75% wave volume to get rid of that clipping in some commercial tracks. I don't think I would have any problems with the bass and drums, all of my tracks turn out very shiny, trebly and most of them at a low volume. Thats what I'm trying to fix right now, have the drum beat a little bit more present and the bass higher than usual, the snares not so shiny and ear cutting, etc. A few "small" issues I'm trying to get rid of As for my effects, some of my instruments have a little compression, reverb, a harmonic exciter, little things here and there... but in general, I basically have no big master effects chain. It's all volume, panning and effects in individual channels. This is my track as of now: http://www.mediafire.com/?wpaf2a0bw5lpi28 Maybe after a listen you guys could point out some stuff I haven't noticed. Anyways, thanks again for the responses I'll be tweaking this track and see what turns out.
  3. Hey people, Well I've tried a few things to avoid this, but I just can't get my overall mixes as loud as any commercial track. My tracks in general have a low volume... I work in FL Studio and master everything in Adobe Audition. I've read other threads related to this subject but it just didn't work out for me. I'd like to get a louder, powerful sound out of my mixes but I'm not sure where to start. It all sounds good and neat but the volume is just too low. I just hope FL and/or Audition are enough to be able to pull out some more volume out of my tracks. I tried Audition's multiband compressor and a few other things, but I wasn't able to pull more than 1db out of my track without clipping or distortion. I assume I just have no idea how to use compressors right I don't know where to start right now, any kind of advice is greatly appreciated!
×
×
  • Create New...