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🎯 Tip — Pink Noise Mixing Hack
Ever felt like your mix sounds 🔥 in the studio but completely falls apart in the car? Here’s a trick that fixes that fast: use pink noise to balance your levels. ⚡ How It Works: - Pink noise is a “balanced frequency” sound that spans lows, mids, and highs. - If your track sits right under pink noise, it’ll sit right almost anywhere. - It forces you to hear what’s actually balanced — not just what your ears are used to. - 🎚 Step-By-Step: 1. Drop pink noise on a new track (keep it low, just audible). 2. Play your mix and bring each channel up until it’s barely audible under the pink noise. 3. Do this for vocals, kick, bass, and main instruments. 4. Turn the pink noise off… and boom. Your mix suddenly translates everywhere. 🎧 Why It’s Fire: - No more “bass disappearing in the car” moments. - Instantly exposes what’s too loud or too buried. - Makes your mixes consistent across headphones, speakers, and club systems. 💬 Try it out and drop your before/after thoughts below 👇Even better, post a quick screenshot of your mix session after you’ve run the pink noise test. DOWNLOAD THIS FREE PINK NOISE WAV BELOW <3 With love - Spike
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🎯 Tip/Trick — “Frequency-Based Panning: Make Your Mix Breathe”
Ever feel like your mix is crowded, but you don’t want to throw anything out? Here’s a trick I use all the time: pan based on frequency, not just left or right. 🔧 How to Do It: - High-frequency elements (vocals, hi-hats, cymbals, lead synths) → pan slightly left or right. - Low-frequency elements (kick, bass, sub synths) → keep them centered or pan subtly opposite your highs. - Mids → play with placement depending on importance, but keep them mostly near centre for focus. 🎚 Why This Works: - Your mix breathes naturally — highs float, lows stay tight. - Clarity is king — low-end isn’t fighting for space with highs or mids. - Stereo field feels alive — small movements make your mix feel wider without losing focus. 🧪 Quick Experiment: 1. Pick a track with multiple layers. 2. Subtly pan highs left, lows right (or vice versa). 3. Toggle mono/stereo — notice how the centre stays solid while the sides create space. 4. Share a before-and-after snippet in the comments — let’s hear how it opens up your track! - Spike
🎯 Tip/Trick — “Mix in Mono, Master in Stereo”
Let me let you in on one game-changing habit: always start your mix in mono — then switch back to stereo for depth later. Why it works: - Clarity first: In mono, your elements sit or clash without the stereo field hiding trouble. If your bass disappears or guitars drown out vocals in mono, it’s a sign something needs fixing before you add width. - Glue the core: When your mix feels balanced in mono, it only gets stronger when you open it up in stereo — the mix glues itself with better focus. - Quick problem spotting: Phase issues, level imbalances, and overuse of effects become obvious immediately—saving you hours of hunting later. How I use it: 1. Drop half your mix in levels until it sounds coherent in mono. 2. Make adjustments—especially with low-end, vocal clarity, and stereo wideners. 3. Once your mix “still bangs” in mono, switch to stereo and breath in life—use panning, reverbs, and effects to enhance, not mask. Try this next session: - Mix the first 3–4 minutes of a song in mono—don’t peek into stereo yet. - Listen back—does everything still stand out? What needs tweak? - Drop in stereo, note what changes for the better and let the mix breathe. - Do you notice all the frequencies at low levels punching through? Do you even mono... bro? With love - Spike
🎯 Tip — “Mix While Cooking”… Literally
Let me drop something real simple that can change your finishing game: mix while you're actually cooking. Hear me out—when you're in the middle of mixing and immerse yourself in critical listening, it’s easy to lose perspective. Your ears get fatigued, your brain goes into auto-pilot, and you might second-guess decisions that sounded awesome 10 minutes ago. So, here’s a trick: kick off your favourite recipe—something that smells like victory—and start mixing while that's cooking. The gap between stirring the pot and listening heats your ears back up. You’ll catch things you missed: a harsh top end, a buried bass, or vocals that need a little more life. Even better, mix in short, intentional bursts tied to your cooking steps—like “adjust the chorus levels while my pasta boils for 5 minutes.” Why this works: - Natural rest resets your ears — not too long, not too short, just enough to reset balance. - Keeps your energy up — you’re feeding your creativity and yourself. - Helps you finish faster — you’ll mix smarter, not longer. Try this next mix session: 1. Start cooking something tasty. 2. Use the cooking timer as your mix rhythm. 3. Trust your ears when you come back to the track after a minute away. 4. Stay hungry—both creatively and for food. Who else finds leaving the mix and doing something mundane like cooking helps with clarity? Let me know what activity helps recharge your ears mid-session! - Spike
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🎯 Tip — “Mix While Cooking”… Literally
Finishing Your Tracks!
🎯 Tip — The 80% Rule to Actually Finish Tracks One of the biggest killers of momentum in music production is chasing perfection too early. Here’s a modern workflow hack I use: 👉 Get your track to 80% done as fast as possible.That means the arrangement is there, the vibe feels right, and the mix is good enough to get the idea across. Don’t waste time polishing hi-hats or EQ’ing reverb tails at this stage. Why this works: - ⚡ Momentum beats perfection. You stay excited about the track. - 🎚 Decisions get easier. Once the track lives as a whole, small mix tweaks have context. - 🎵 You actually finish. Done is better than “almost perfect forever.” Once you hit 80%, step away. The next session is for refining — not rewriting. Think of it like building a house: frame it up first, then paint the walls. 💡 Try this next time: Set a timer for 2 hours and push your track to the 80% mark. You’ll be surprised how much easier the final 20% becomes once the song exists as a full piece. Keep pushing! - Spike
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Finishing Your Tracks!
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