I think I held this face the entire night...
Overall Bizarro's pretty lame...but his opposite-ness to Superman made me remember my Reverse-EQ method, which I'll be calling the Bizarro method from now on.
Or until Jim Lee sues me for copyright infringement...
It's one of my favorite tricks for making the vocals fit better in the mix, even if it's a really busy mix with a lot of instruments.
You'll inevitably have this problem.
You're mixing a vocal and If you pull the fader up, the vocal is too loud.
If you leave it alone, it'll vanish in the mix and won't sound clear.
People usually approach fixing this by focusing on the vocal track. You might start boosting some mids in order to get it to punch through the other instruments. Or you might compress the vocal too much just to get it to sit better on top of the mix.
Unfortunately, both of those approaches might not work.
At this point it’s time to leave the vocal alone and start focusing on the tracks that are actually in the way.
Here's how the Bizarro Method works:
Although this trick uses a vocal and a bass as an example, this method can be used for any number of instruments that are clashing with each other.
- Step 1 – Make the vocal sound as good as you can. Do it in solo first, but make sure it fits the context of the mix. Don’t worry about whether it sits in the mix, just make sure the vocal sound fits the song.
- Step 2 – Find the instruments that are clashing with the vocals (let’s use the bass as an example).
- Step 3 – Use an EQ to boost and sweep around the mids. Find the area where the bass is masking/overlapping the vocals the most.
- Step 4 – Cut the bass in that frequency region until the vocals sound cleaner.
- Step 5 – Rinse and repeat for other instruments if needed.
BOOM! Welcome to Bizarro World!