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Pro Audio
Junior Varsity
Every live sound engineer should spend a little time in a recording studio.
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<blockquote data-quote="Max Warasila" data-source="post: 98767" data-attributes="member: 3845"><p>Re: Every live sound engineer should spend a little time in a recording studio.</p><p></p><p>If you get more experience, in as many different situations as possible, you'll almost certainly be better than you were before.</p><p></p><p>I know a few people who have never been in the studio on more than two or three occasions, simply because they don't enjoy it (probably because of anal-retentive people), and still mix wonderfully because they have decades of experience doing it. It's not about where, it's about how many different wheres combined with lots of time.</p><p></p><p>And I agree with mixing towards the end goal, and analyzing the goal rather than how you got there. After all, it's the only thing the audience hears. There were a few posts about this, but too many to credit.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Max Warasila, post: 98767, member: 3845"] Re: Every live sound engineer should spend a little time in a recording studio. If you get more experience, in as many different situations as possible, you'll almost certainly be better than you were before. I know a few people who have never been in the studio on more than two or three occasions, simply because they don't enjoy it (probably because of anal-retentive people), and still mix wonderfully because they have decades of experience doing it. It's not about where, it's about how many different wheres combined with lots of time. And I agree with mixing towards the end goal, and analyzing the goal rather than how you got there. After all, it's the only thing the audience hears. There were a few posts about this, but too many to credit. [/QUOTE]
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Every live sound engineer should spend a little time in a recording studio.
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