Making a Scene Presents - Arrangement Before Mixing: Fix It in the Song, Not the Plugin
Welcome to the Plugin Pileup

You press Play.

The drums sound powerful. The bass sounds huge. The guitars und like a choir descending from the heavens with excellent credit.

There is only one small problem.

You cannot hear the song.

The lead vocal is buried. The bass and kick drum are wrestling in a dark basement. Three guitar parts are fighting over the same few notes. A giant keyboard pad stretches from one end of the frequency range to the other. The background singers are performing as if they have just staged a successful coup.

So you do what many home-studio producers do. You open an equalizer. Then a compressor. Then another equalizer because the first equalizer clearly did not understand the assignment. Then a stereo widener. Then a saturation plugin. Then a masking tool. Then something with a glowing tube graphic and the word “vintage” in its name.

Two hours later, the mix is louder, wider, brighter, warmer, more exciting, and somehow even harder to understand.

This is often the moment when the artist decides the problem must be a lack of expensive plugins.

It probably is not.

Many mixing problems begin before mixing. They begin while the parts are being written, chosen, performed, layered, and recorded. They begin when every instrument is given permission to play all the time. They begin when a guitar, piano, synthesizer, bass, and vocal are all placed in the same musical range. They begin when the verse is already at full power, leaving the chorus with nowhere to go except slightly louder and perhaps wearing a hat.

The hard truth is also good news. You may not need another plugin. You may need a better arrangement.

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