
You can hear that the drums have been well recorded and are being controlled nicely by a selection of VMR modules. Remember this is not a mixing tutorial, but a chance for you to hear a new plug-in emulation of a classic piece of hardware at work. I have also included screenshots of some of the channel and bus strips used in the mix so you can see what I used and how I had it set up. The only other plug-ins you will hear are a little plate reverb for the amazing Exponential Audio R4 and a little bit of final limiting from the Universal Audio Precision Limiter. For the second track, we have kicked in the EQ. The first is the soloed instrumental or vocal track with all the processing enabled except the FG-A EQ. Drums were tracked by myself at my studio all the other parts were recorded by the band in their home studio spaces.įor each of the instruments, we have created two audio files. This track called Defenceless Earth features on their new album which will be out in the autumn.

The Trackįor this Mix Test, we are using a session by UK band Voltaire. In this Mix Test, we take a look and listen to how you can use the FG-A along with other VMR modules and Slate Digital Plug-ins to create a hard-hitting heavy rock mix. The FG-A module is a 4 band EQ modelled after a very famous and popular 3 band American EQ, the API 550A. Helps us keep the sub clean by reporting posts and comments that are in fault.As you may know, Steven and the team at Slate Digital have released their latest module for the Slate Virtual Mix Rack (VMR). Check out the rest of them before posting and learn more behind their reason to be: NO LINK DUMPING FOR SELF PROMOTION (use a text post instead, introduce yourself, don't be spam-y, be transparent)īreaking any of these rules will result in your post being instantly deleted and repeated offenses will result in your banning.


Have questions about mixing? Would like feedback on your track? You've come to the right place.įor questions about recording, gear troubleshooting and nearly everything else that doesn't involve mixing, try: /r/audioengineering (that's the core professional audio community on reddit) A marketplace to search for and offer mixing and mastering services (separately).
