John
bigboi
This actually falls into the "trade secrets" category. When you take your car into pepboys, you are paying for a service. The technician wont take you in the back and show you how he fixed it. In essence, he will lose business. The same is true with mixing. If your mix engineer gives you, say the SONAR FILE and everything he did to get your mix corrected, he would be giving you a possible blue print for your future mixes and thus losing money.
In the future, simply get in writing exactly what you want as an end result, files and all. If your mix engi has a problem, find another.
I'm also in agreement with this as well and is in the line of my thinking about one's knowledge. Some mixers have a "sound" and are paid big bucks because of it. It is theirs and they own it. Also there is custom gear that is not on the open market. Plugins can also be custom.
Yep, well said John and this too is very true. That said, it still (in a sense, though completely correct) makes things more technical than they need to be. We all have our own distinct sounds and ways of doing things. I'm no big sound engineer where what I do is super secretive or ground-breaking....but what I do is mine....even though the techniques were created by someone else and I improvised on them. :)
I've shared examples with people on this forum for years showing in depth ways of doing things. From audio examples to short video clips for the price of an internet connection. I've never walked away from someone in need that I could help (or someone deserving of help as I'm more selective these days) and have definitely gone above and beyond to get some of my points across. Heck, I've even shared videos and pics of some of my templates and techniques for people having problems. BUT....they have to do the work based off of what they see and hear.
Short story you may find humorous. I did a video mix for a client one time. He had the mix there in front of him while watching my video. He was trying to cop the guitar eq, effects and compression that I had in his mix but for some reason was unsuccessful. He asked me for the template because he just couldn't get it right. How can you watch a vid where you see what I've done...and not get it right? LOL! I told him I'd rather not do that. He begged some more and offered to pay me for it. I declined, but his offers got more intense and the money value got insane. This guy wanted those settings like you wouldn't believe.
I finally caved in and sent presets to the plugs I used instead of the template and of course, refused his money. LOL! So what did he learn from this? He saw what I did when he got the presets, but to this day, has no idea how or why I came up with the sound for THOSE particular guitars, didn't watch that part of the vid close enough, and uses that preset on all his guitars all the time no matter what they sound like. LOL! He sends me mixes and I tell him "bro, the guitars sound bad" and he replies "but I used your preset!" LMAO! <insert huge face palm here> (incidentally, I figured out why he wasn't copping the sound. The Pro Channel modules needed to be set to "post" and he missed that part in the vid. Doh!)
The moral of the story....if you take hand-outs that are done for you, there are some things you may learn....but it defeats the purpose of going through the motions to get from point "suck" to point "perfection". When we that are guitarists learn a lick, you learn the lick and then incorporate it in your own style without using is as you learned it verbatim. This is what makes you, "you". Anyone can copy something or use someone elses hard work...it doesn't improve your art, it improves your copy skills as well as the ability to drive someone else's car and claim it as your own. :)
Sort of like being in a cover band and saying to the crowd as I like to say...."we're going to do an original right now....*originally* done by someone else." :)
-Danny