questions on busing
I have found that when I do vocal mixes, with a lead voc, and background vocals, along with an instrument mix, a technique which seems to work well for me is to create;
1. A vocal master bus, i.e., send the LV to the vocal master, treat it as needed either on the track and with sends to vocal FX buses, Verb, and Delay. (where those FX buses come back to the vocal master)
2. A BGV bus, where I send the BGV tracks to it, pan them as appropriate, and send BGV to the vocal master described above.
This allows me the ability to control the BGV in relation to the LV, and also to limit the vocal master to control overall vox.
I then do similar things with the instruments? i.e.,
Acoustic guitars, to an Acoustic guitar bus, electric guitars to an electric bus, then all guitars to a guitar master.
Strings the same way
Drums, etc...
Then I send all non-vocal tracks to an Instrument bus?
Now I have two sub-master buses, 1) vocals and 2) Instruments.
I send these to the mains and perform overall limiting and other treatment on the mains.
I find that this allows me control over many different steps. I can still use envelopes, but this technique seems to allow me greater flexibility with regard to compression and limiting and panning, etc... For all of the intricate substeps in more complex mixes.
No one told me to do it this way? And I'm not even sure if it's a good idea? It seems to work pretty well for me.
Does this seem crazy? Or does anyone else do anything similar?
Sittin downtown in a railway station one toke over the line.