Mastering Music Mixing Techniques

Mastering music mixing, explains how to make your songs sound professional and balanced.
The right workflow and mindset make all the difference. Here we discuss the core principles of great mixes, from setting levels and EQ to compression, panning, reverb, and automation. You’ll learn how to build depth and separation, make instruments sit together naturally, and create mixes that translate across speakers, headphones, and streaming platforms.
Beyond technique, mixing is also about taste and focus. We explore the use of a reference tracks to stay objective, and develop your ear for balance and tone. Plus practical advice on managing headroom, using gain staging effectively, and understanding when to stop.
Mastering mixing skills can mean the difference between a demo and a release-ready song. You don’t need expensive gear, you need clarity, consistency, and an understanding of how sound works together.
Learn to mix with intent, refine your ear, and make every track sound its best, no matter where you’re working from.
Develop Your Skills – Use Song Critique

How To Use Song Critique You can use song critique as a tool to develop your skills in songwriting and music production. This blog post details several uses of song critique and how it can benefit your songwriting. Song Critique Is A Focused Discussion Critique is much more than an opinion. To improve the song […]
17 Powerful Secrets Of Making Music

Author Profile John Moxey John Moxey Website So you’ve got the passion, the talent, and maybe even some gear. But what’s the secret sauce to making music that’s not just good, but absolutely killer? Lucky for you, we’ve got 17 powerful secrets to help you hit all the right notes (pun intended). Learn The Secrets […]
Noise Gates and Expanders

Noise gates and expanders, control noise without killing tone. Noise is part of recording, but it doesn’t have to ruin a performance. Noise gates and expanders help clean up unwanted sound while keeping the music intact, when they’re used correctly. This article explains the difference between gates and expanders in simple terms. You’ll learn how thresholds, ratios, attack, hold, and release shape what gets through and what stays silent. We show how these tools behave on vocals, drums, guitars, and live recordings, and why subtle settings usually work better than aggressive cuts. You’ll also see common mistakes that cause choppy tails, lost sustain, or unnatural silence. Understanding when to gate, when to expand, and when to leave things alone makes a huge difference to realism.
Equalization / Equalisation (EQ)

Equalization (EQ), hear clearly, mix with intent. EQ is one of the first tools you reach for in recording and mixing, and one of the easiest to misuse. Done well, equalization brings clarity, space, and focus. Done poorly, it creates harshness, muddiness, and fatigue. This article explains EQ from the ground up. You’ll learn what equalization really does, how different EQ types behave, and why cutting is often more effective than boosting. We break down shelves, bells, filters, and parametric EQ in practical terms, with a focus on listening rather than staring at curves. You’ll also see how EQ decisions change depending on the source and the mix context. A sound that works solo may clash in a full arrangement. Understanding that relationship is key to better mixes.