Should I work on my music theory or knowledge of audio effects? Discover how to achieve release-quality mixes even in the smallest studios by applying power-user techniques from the world’s most successful producers. Mixing Secrets for the Small Studio is a down-to-earth primer for small-studio enthusiasts who want chart-ready sonics in a hurry. Drawing on the back-room strategies of more than 100 famous names, this entertaining guide leads you step-by-step through the entire mixing process. On the way, you’ll unravel the mysteries of every type of mix pr…
Should I work on my music theory or knowledge of audio effects?(r/WeAreTheMusicMakers)
you should definitely learn both. it can only help.
i don’t think you need to learn piano in the sense of learning performance. but knowledge of music theory, audio theory (as it translates into production, mixing and mastering), and sound design will definitely create efficiencies for getting what you hear in your head into your DAW and out of ur speakers.
just set a side like and hour a day, or 30 min a day, for each topic, and just stick with it.
i think that it’s important you keep the ratio between time spent producing and learning pretty large, meaning if u read an hour a day, make sure you’re producing at least like 4 hours a day. nothing is better than educating your ears.
Mixing Secrets for the Small Studio
4645
Should I work on my music theory or knowledge of audio effects?
Discover how to achieve release-quality mixes even in the smallest studios by applying power-user techniques from the world’s most successful producers. Mixing Secrets for the Small Studio is a down-to-earth primer for small-studio enthusiasts who want chart-ready sonics in a hurry. Drawing on the back-room strategies of more than 100 famous names, this entertaining guide leads you step-by-step through the entire mixing process. On the way, you’ll unravel the mysteries of every type of mix pr…
More about the book on Amazon
Most upvoted comment
Top rated Music books on Reddit rank no. 2
you should definitely learn both. it can only help.
i don’t think you need to learn piano in the sense of learning performance. but knowledge of music theory, audio theory (as it translates into production, mixing and mastering), and sound design will definitely create efficiencies for getting what you hear in your head into your DAW and out of ur speakers.
just set a side like and hour a day, or 30 min a day, for each topic, and just stick with it.
here are some starting points
i think that it’s important you keep the ratio between time spent producing and learning pretty large, meaning if u read an hour a day, make sure you’re producing at least like 4 hours a day. nothing is better than educating your ears.
Permalink
Additional Information
audioengineering,ableton,WeAreTheMusicMakers,edmproduction,Guitar
23
290
$21.61
Paperback
ABIS_BOOK
Mike Senior
1
Focal Press
Mixing Secrets for the Small Studio
Should I work on my music theory or knowledge of audio effects?
0
/r/WeAreTheMusicMakers/comments/46gtq7/should_i_work_on_my_music_theory_or_knowledge_of/
More about the book on Amazon