|
Re: Re: Crowded sound vs. spacious sound (mixing / mastering / arrangement)
| quote: | Originally posted by Beatflux
Part of it is just getting older, but the other part is producers following the trends. People like Daft Punk and Deadmau5 have made that ultra compressed sound popular.
I've always been obsessed with what drives people to dance, and when you juxtapose popular dance music with EDM the differences can be quite baffling.
Most popular dance songs are quite open in dynamics and sound. The patterns are usually quite simple. Look at sandstorm, or Zombie nation. Very simple.
|
I couldn't agree less. Both those tracks have little in terms of open dynamics and were popular because they were either catchy or could be sung while drunk at a football match. It has little to do with "open dynamics". In fact sandstorm is possibly one of the more crowded tracks in terms of content I can think of.
And daft punk - yes their sounds are compressed but from an arrangement point of view, they are incredible well made to allow space for each element and in that respect they are very open sounding.
What drives people to dance? Groove. You can try to add whatever else you want, in any way, but people will dance to a good groove, period. It's primitive reaction in it's purest form (after eat and procreate).
| quote: | Originally posted by Beatflux
Check out this song.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CUftr8YAtBo
It was a short produced for the Online Booty Call Commercial. If you compared it to EDM, its dynamic range is huge. Listen to what happens when you turn it up. It's not fatiguing at all and it still sounds balanced. This is what a professional track should sound like in my opinion. When you have it turned down, it sounds small, but as you turn up the volume it gets fatter and fatter. The same thing happens with Thriller. The loudness of a track doesn't influence how good a song is.
I guess its easier to think that, "My track must suck because there isn't any mastering on it!" Or..."It isn't loud enough." I mean, future music just had a feature on mastering where they compared, amateur to professional and the result was that the professional one sounded better. Now kids are going to think, "I need professional mastering for the track to sound good!" |
Thriller (alegedly) doesn't have any compression on it, but that's not why it was good - again as per the examples you posted before, they are catchy, well written songs, and in the case of Thriller, performed by someone that was incredibly talented and one of the greatest performers(MJ), and produced by someone even more talented (QJ). It' not about the loudness war or compression.
Good engineering is giving elements the space to breath and stand out as individual sounds and as composite. Good arrangement is the same but in a musically creative way. Good mixing is making the most of those two previous statement and good mastering it just accentuating those previous three things.
|