Just to jump back in...appreciate all the feedback but definitely don't want anyone to get upset over this thread... =)
Honestly, I feel like I do way too much when I'm composing a song and building a track, and it's a pattern I'm trying hard to break out of. My first job in Nashville is "songwriter", but now that also means "studio and producer genius" just to get heads to turn. The temptation of "unlimited everything" is a double-edged sword for obvious reasons...but for me...it's usually "cool...I added all these amazing parts and layers...now let's add the vocal....oops I have mud and no space for it!!!" The simplicity, if you wanna call it that, of hearing Billie Jean, was just eye (and ear) opening. No worries about sub bass/kick issues, sidechaining synths, or any of the self-inflicted problems I seem to create. There it all was...comped or whatever form I had it in....and it sounded amazing even on my laptop speakers. MJs flaws...out of tune harmony stacks...squeaks and snaps...it was all beautiful.
For example, I love my Trilian bass (in fact, Charlie Puth used the EXACT same retro-60's patch I use all the time for "Attention"...which you can see on that video I linked), but man...I have to carve SOOO much out of it sometimes, like I do with kick samples and other synths to make it all fit together. It's like - every sample and patch these days is mastered/saturated/huge (the temptation), and when you wanna use it all, you get garbage. I'm tired of listening to my old mixes and having the same reaction -- what the $#*@ was I thinkin?!?!?
I shop at Publix a lot and am amazed at these incredible hits from the 70s and 80s they constantly play that sound beyond amazing at 50 feet above me on a cheesy mono speaker. It's all so humbling and I really wanna get to the "less is more" mindset...and try to un-forget all I know about VSTs and loops and Neal Peart's words from an ancient interview of "more is more". I'm not good enough yet to make more sound like more. I also blame a Dr. Luke ASCAP vid I watched of him de-constructing a Katy Perry hit with 7934897 tracks.
All I wanna do is make the right decisions so that I love my mix and composition better with all the tracks un-muted as opposed to right now, where I spend too much time adding things that actually make it worse, which muting stuff easily reveals. Some pop music is really sparse these days, as Nashville is starting to copy too, so maybe there's hope for me yet.
Thanks to all for this forum space....I mean....music therapy sessions!
Rizzo