Mar 15, 2010
I’m sure that this will be the first of many posts on this topic, it is probably the one thing that we are most passionate about! Mixing musically to me is quite simply about viewing audio through the lens of music. Every technical decision I make must filter through the lens of music. Ok, so this is all great but now it’s time for some practical advice. In order to better focus on the music, sometimes you need to focus on the technical stuff more. I know, it seems counter intuitive at first but hear me out.
I think that by focusing on being technically proficient, it frees you up to focus on the music when it counts. It’s kind of like when you were first learning how to drive a car and it took all of your attention to just start off smoothly and not hit anything. Once you became proficient at the basic skills of driving, your attention was freed up to focus on cooler things like talking to a buddy or finding a good radio station. Then, one day you had to learn to drive a manual transmission and suddenly your focus was back on driving skills again. With a little luck, you eventually mastered that too. I think that mixing works much the same way at times.
Remember that first time you used a sound board? Remember just trying to figure out how to use the gain knob and push up the faders without making any strange noises? Once you figured that out, you could shift your attention to the music. That is until you realized that you needed to learn how to use an EQ because the vocal sounded funny. Eventually you started to figure that out and your attention was freed up again.
This really is a never-ending process, I hope that you never stop learning. The key is to be intentional about sharpening your skills at the right time and then leaving margin for focusing on the music. Try to spend time before Sunday learning and practicing new technical skills so that when Sunday comes, you can focus more on the music. Eventually you will be able to spend more and more time focusing on the music during rehearsal as the technical realm becomes second nature.
Be very focused on learning new technical skills at strategic times so that you can free up you mind to focus on the music when it counts.
-Dustin
I think most people intuitively understand the concept of “mixing musically.” Because it is a broad philosophy, I’d like to offer a practical step to aid in your journey toward musical mixes.
My goal in any mix is to create emotion from the music. Emotion is the currency of music, and the intangible factor (in tandem with the Holy Spirit) that compels a person to make life-changing decisions. As Dustin mentioned, you have to build off some technical knowledge before you can free the emotion from the mix. The journey toward finding the emotion is a process…like in marriage, it is not immediately or romantically achieved. Let me explain…
Wednesday night band rehearsals are challenging for our audio volunteers. At Buckhead Church, we eat at 6pm, soundcheck at 6:40pm, and begin playing songs by 7:10pm. On a good night, with several well-known worship songs, we may only need to run the songs once before we record them. (We record songs for the band to review, and for production volunteers to prepare for Sunday.) The consequence of this tight schedule is that the audio volunteers rarely have time to get all of the instruments in the mix, and they definitely don’t have time to learn the arrangements, and mix them in exquisite detail before we record them.
However….after rehearsal, our audio volunteers comb through the rehearsal tracks to discover what’s happening in the music in any given moment. One way to achieve emotion in your mixes is to study.
By Sunday morning, they know the music as well as I do. Their reward is a mix abundant with life, because most every second of time represents a fader moving to promote or demote a part entering or leaving the music. Their attention to detail amplifies dynamics; the lifting and lowering of the human spirit. And, the payoff is emotion.
Emotion is the currency of music. With it, we can leverage music to lead our church attendees to make decisions for life-change, or simply warm them up to hear the Word. But, it takes work. Consider committing to a process of studying.
-Chris