Dull Sound After MixDown

Author
ChapelHeel66
Max Output Level: -90 dBFS
  • Total Posts : 5
  • Joined: 2013/01/18 20:33:18
  • Status: offline
2018/01/05 01:27:35 (permalink)

Dull Sound After MixDown

I have Sonar X3 Producer.  When I bounce my tracks down to a single track, the resulting single track always has a lower volume and much duller sound than when I just play the individual tracks together.
 
I have a combination of SoftSynth tracks and audio tracks.  I first bounce the SoftSynth tracks to audio tracks (and mute the midi tracks), so I can add the appropriate mixing treatments to the audio versions and can control automation a little better.  I also have some vocals routed to a vocal bus (which feeds the master bus) and route the kick and snare to a drums bus (which feeds the master bus).
 
To mix down, I do this:
 
1.  Select all the tracks I want to go into the mixdown.  Do I need to select the vocal bus and drum bus also?  I've tried this, but it doesn't seem to change the outcome.
2.  Choose "Bounce to Track"
3.  In the options box, I set a New Track as the Destination
4.  For the Source Category, I choose "Entire Mix".  My Source Buses/Tracks is greyed out, because it's just my audio card.  I also have tried "Main Outputs" as the Source category, and then my Source Buses/Tracks is not greyed out and shows my audio card.  The result seems to be the same.  I also have tried choosing "Bus" as the Source Category, and then selecting the Master in my Source Buses/Tracks.  The result seems to be the same.
5.  I select Stereo as the Channel Format.
6.  I set Dithering to None.  Sometimes I set it to Triangular.   The result seems to be the same.
7.  I select all the options at the bottom, so that it takes into account mute, solo, automation, etc.  
 
All the tracks bounce down to a single track, as expected.  I mute the individual tracks and listen only to the new mixed down track.  But it sounds absolutely terrible.  Nothing like what it sounded like when all the individual tracks were playing.  I lose about 3db, and it is dull and lifeless.  Bass is muddy and overrepresented.  Absolutely no top end...can barely hear high hats, etc.
 
What am I doing wrong?  
 
#1

4 Replies Related Threads

    davdud101
    Max Output Level: -69 dBFS
    • Total Posts : 1058
    • Joined: 2010/07/15 13:30:44
    • Location: Detroit, MI
    • Status: offline
    Re: Dull Sound After MixDown 2018/01/05 21:00:30 (permalink)
    In my projects, I always have or create a Master bus, where EVERYTHING goes out to the speakers. Then when I'm exporting, I like to set it on "What you hear" and have it set to export from that Master bus.

    This may not be the "pro" way of doing it, idk...and I'm sure some folks more experienced with exporting can chime in with a more standard solution, but from what I've found (multiple years using these settings), this method ALWAYS, 100% of the time mixes down an audio file that is exactly like what I'm hearing in the project pre-mixdown.
     
    Not sure it exactly solves your problem, but it solved any issues for me involving mixdowns where stuff isn't coming out EXACTLY as it sounded pre-mixdown.

     
    Mics: MXL 990, MXL R80, 2 x MXL Tempo XLRs, Cobalt Co9, SM48, iSK Starlight
    Cans: Hifiman HE4XX, AKG M220
    Gear: Cakewalk BBL - PreSonus Firepod - Alesis Elevate 3 - Axiom 49
    DAW: Win10, AMD FX-8300, 16GB DDR3
    #2
    davdud101
    Max Output Level: -69 dBFS
    • Total Posts : 1058
    • Joined: 2010/07/15 13:30:44
    • Location: Detroit, MI
    • Status: offline
    Re: Dull Sound After MixDown 2018/01/05 21:00:30 (permalink)
    In my projects, I always have or create a Master bus, where EVERYTHING goes out to the speakers. Then when I'm exporting, I like to set it on "What you hear" and have it set to export from that Master bus.

    This may not be the "pro" way of doing it, idk...and I'm sure some folks more experienced with exporting can chime in with a more standard solution, but from what I've found (multiple years using these settings), this method ALWAYS, 100% of the time mixes down an audio file that is exactly like what I'm hearing in the project pre-mixdown.
     
    Not sure it exactly solves your problem, but it solved any issues for me involving mixdowns where stuff isn't coming out EXACTLY as it sounded pre-mixdown.

     
    Mics: MXL 990, MXL R80, 2 x MXL Tempo XLRs, Cobalt Co9, SM48, iSK Starlight
    Cans: Hifiman HE4XX, AKG M220
    Gear: Cakewalk BBL - PreSonus Firepod - Alesis Elevate 3 - Axiom 49
    DAW: Win10, AMD FX-8300, 16GB DDR3
    #3
    Kalle Rantaaho
    Max Output Level: -5 dBFS
    • Total Posts : 7005
    • Joined: 2006/01/09 13:07:59
    • Location: Finland
    • Status: offline
    Re: Dull Sound After MixDown 2018/01/06 15:20:07 (permalink)
    I'm not 100% sure I got your workflow description right. You are using the "standard" way of routing, are you?: Every instrument and bus is routed to Master Bus? Also Master Bus should be the source for bouncing instead of Entire Mix. This is the easiest way to make sure everything is in your control, and no signal finds pig holes.
     
    Your description of the resulting sound makes me think of phasing problems and things due to arrangement.
    In the project, do you have, for example, a synth track with bass material plus a normal bass guitar? Or similar sorts of high frequency sounds (like many acoustic guitars)? Or a two hand piano part, including low sounds, and an e-bass? These may offend each other, cumulate disturbingly or cause phasing issues (opposing phases eliminate each other resulting either full silence or defective sound).
    Or do you have single source (mono) instruments tracked or copied on two tracks to widen the sound? Or a mono effect on a stereo track which sums all to mono and causes phasing?
     
    Or does the bounced track get double-effected: There are FX on master bus that end up on the bounced track.
    Then you audition the bounced track through Master where the FX are still on? 
     
    Chances are very many, but I'm somewhat convinced the answer lies in the direction of routing/summing, phasing, arrangement.

    SONAR PE 8.5.3, Asus P5B, 2,4 Ghz Dual Core, 4 Gb RAM, GF 7300, EMU 1820, Bluetube Pre  -  Kontakt4, Ozone, Addictive Drums, PSP Mixpack2, Melda Creative Pack, Melodyne Plugin etc.
    The benefit of being a middle aged amateur is the low number of years of frustration ahead of you.
    #4
    bitflipper
    01100010 01101001 01110100 01100110 01101100 01101
    • Total Posts : 26036
    • Joined: 2006/09/17 11:23:23
    • Location: Everett, WA USA
    • Status: offline
    Re: Dull Sound After MixDown 2018/01/07 17:34:53 (permalink)
    That certainly does have all the earmarks of a phase issue. I'd suggest starting with an experiment: bypass ALL effects and repeat your bounce procedure. Does the bounced track still sound different from the normal mix?


    All else is in doubt, so this is the truth I cling to. 

    My Stuff
    #5
    Jump to:
    © 2024 APG vNext Commercial Version 5.1