James Perrett wrote: ↑Thu Nov 21, 2024 11:43 pmbencuri wrote: ↑Thu Nov 21, 2024 10:48 pm I can show you something however that is my genre, and I used that as a direct inspiration for this recent project:
https://youtu.be/VDdKk6-mSuA?si=IV7dRMbkOEoSAvEX&t=106
It suffers from the same symptoms like my mix. Good on quality speakers, bad on low end I did not even notice it so far, just now that I have problems with my project.
That track sounds like it was mixed by the drummer
That's not a good reference track and I'm not surprised that it has problems on other systems. It seems that you prefer what most people would consider to be a skewed sound with excessive bass. That's fine if you are just doing it for yourself but if you are hoping to create something for release then you need to re-calibrate your ears and tastes towards a sound that is more universal.
One other thought - how loud are you listening when you mix through the hifi speakers? Our perceptions change with different volume levels and I like to mix at fairly low levels as it is too easy to make a mix sound impressive at high volumes. You have to work much harder if you want a mix to sound good at low volumes.
I have been aware of this concept, to recalibrate my ear to make that mix more cross platform. But the problem is: very often in this genre, if I do so, the result will be a pain to listen to, for me, on HiFi. And it upsets me that there is the expensive, great system, and I cannot sit down and enjoy things, but I need to limit the experience to headphones and lower grade desktop speakers, or the car, if I want the mix to be optimized for what most people listen to music on. Interestingly from other genres like rock, pop, jazz, world, I never had this problem, I have a big collection of CDs and they usually work well cross platform, except for some rare cases.
Anyway I usually mix at middle volume.