Studio Techniques

Studio techniques & music production tutorials on recording, mixing, mastering and effects processing for users of Ableton, Cubase, Logic Pro, Reason, FL Studio and ProTools.

Best Plugin Order For Mixing? – A Tutorial On Which Plugin Order Is Best


Best Plugin Order For Mixing? – A Tutorial On Which Plugin Order Is Best.

Best Plugin Order For Mixing?

Best Plugin Order For Mixing?

If you’ve mixed for any length of time you might have thought to yourself  about what’s the best plugin order for mixing your tracks. Or maybe the thought has never crossed your mind. You simply always reach for the same plugins in the same order on each mix. I want to answer a reader question regarding the subject and give you a few things to consider as you mix.

There Is A Difference

The first thing we should be clear about is that there is a real difference in how your track will sound depending on the order of your plugins. You can take 3 plugins on a vocal track, swap them around and the vocal will sound different.

I know it sounds obvious, but plugin inserts (much like their hardware counterparts) operate on a simple input/output basis. What comes in gets processed and sent out. Why is this relevant? Because you need to simply be aware that if you change the order of plugins you are changing the inputs and outputs of the signal. You are changing what a plugin receives, processes, and then eventually dumps back out. So, plugin order is important and does make a difference.

There Is No Right Way

Now all of THAT being said, there technically is no “correct” plugin order that you must follow. Some mixes call for certain plugin chains and some mixing engineers prefer certain methods as well. It doesn’t matter what anyone else does, it matters what makes the track sound amazing and fit in the mix.

How I Handle EQ And Compression

Personally I use two main plugins on almost every track, EQ and Compression. I’ll use more effects on certain instruments but I can guarantee there will likely be EQ and Compression on everything. I prefer to place my EQ first in the chain and the compressor immediately after. The reasoning? I personally view EQ as a tool to carve away and “fix” the recorded sound while on the other hand I view compression as a tool to change or enhance the now “fixed” sound in order to sit in the mix better. If I’m going to do a lot of subtractive EQ, then I’d rather remove the unwanted frequencies before I go turning them up with a compressor.

The Rest Of The Effects

After I’ve EQ’d and compressed, then and only then will I add other effects dessers, modulating effects (chorus, flanger, phaser), etc.

Again, I don’t want to effect or enhance a signal that still has unwanted frequencies in it, so I’ll make sure to insert these types of plugins AFTER my EQ and Compression.

As asked by Michael in the original question, as it relates to delay and reverb effects, I don’t actually insert these effects right on the tracks.

Rather I’ll use sends and busses to blend in the amount of wet effect that I want. And this usually comes after the insert plugins.

The only exception to this might be if I’m using some kind of distortion or tape saturation effect. These can work really well as the first insert in your chain as it’s acting as part of the initial sound, which then can be EQ’d and compressed to taste.

Again, this is my personal preference and is very characteristic of how I mix. I have many friends who are mixers and they do things very differently. It truly is a matter of taste.

Original source: http://therecordingrevolution.com/2012/03/09/best-plugin-order-for-mixing-reader-question/

Best Plugin Order For Mixing? – A Tutorial On Which Plugin Order Is Best

—————

Ableton Live, Logic Pro, Reason, Cubase & ProTools tools  –  royalty free loops, samples and sounds from Loopmasters – the sample boutique.


Related Posts

3D Mixing Tutorial Part 6 – Depth – Mixing Tips and Tricks
3D Mixing Tutorial Part 6 - Depth 3D Mixing Tutorial Part 6 - Depth In this segment of our mix down tutorial, we are going to begin to look  into depth. Depth ...
READ MORE
Mixing Bass in Pro Tools Part 3 – Compression and Limiting
In part 1 of this series Mixing Bass in Pro Tools, I talked about common bass problems. In part 2, I gave you some tips for EQ-ing bass. Today we ...
READ MORE
Mixing Headphones or Monitors – The Differences
Mixing Headphones or Monitors Mixing Headphones or Monitors If you’re mixing on headphones, there are a few things to bear in mind – the differences between a monitor mix and a headphpne ...
READ MORE
Ableton Live Utility Device Tutorial – Part 2
Ableton Live Utility Device Tutorial – Part 2 In Part 1 of this tutorial we had a look at the very useful Ableton Live Utility device and also at a few ...
READ MORE
Compression Basics - Getting Under The Hood
How To Use Parallel Processing In FL Studio Parallel processing is a mixing technique where you duplicate audio signal, add processing (such as compression) to the other signal and leave the ...
READ MORE
3D Mixing Tutorial Part 6 – Depth – Mixing Tips and Tricks
Mixing Bass in Pro Tools Part 3 – Compression and Limiting
Mixing Headphones or Monitors – The Differences
Ableton Live Utility Device Tutorial – Part 2
How To Use Parallel Processing In FL Studio

Leave a Reply