Mixing Guide: Technique, Workflow, Problems & Genres at a Glance
Mixing is the creative and technical step between recording and mastering. You create a mixdown from individual tracks that sounds stable on different monitors and has a cohesive musical feel. If you want to look up terms, use the... Audio GlossaryFor in-depth practical advice, check out the relevant blog articles. For style choices, the genre pages will guide you further.
👉 Audio Glossary (Quickly look up terms)
👉 What is mixing? (Basic definition + process)
📚Table of Contents
Technical requirements for clean mixing
A good mix rarely fails because of the "wrong plugin." More often, it's unstable systems, incorrect driver settings, or monitoring that leads you astray. That's why professional mixing begins with a solid technical foundation.
Setup basics (beginners)
Computing power & stability: If dropouts or CPU spikes slow down your workflow, you'll make worse decisions.
Audio interface & latency: Adjust the buffer size so that you can work smoothly. You'll need different values for recording than for mixing.
Basic DAW setup: Consistently using a template saves time and reduces errors.
Further information:
Monitoring & Measurement (Advanced)
You need a monitoring setup that makes decisions reproducible. This includes room acoustics, headphone checks, and measurement tools (analyzers, correlation meters, LUFS/peak meters).
Further information:
Session preparation & project organization
Before you use EQs and compressors, your session needs to be "readable." Good organization not only saves time, it also prevents typical mixing mistakes: incorrect routings, overlooked clipping, and conflicting FX paths.
Order, routing, groups, references
Sensible order:
Name the tracks, color-code them, and hide unnecessary takes.
Create groups/buses (drums, bass, music, vocals, FX).
Import reference tracks and adjust them to the same listening volume.
Initial phase checks for multi-microphone signals.
Further information:
Content gap (recommended as a new core article):
Session organization in mixing (template, routing, references, prep checklist): 👉Coming soon
Gain staging, levels & headroom
Gain staging is the foundation for controlled dynamics, clean mastering, and stress-free workflow. If levels are too high or too low, plugins will react differently, and your mix will become unreliable.
Why water levels are half the battle (for beginners)
Set the levels properly before you do "sound design".
Don't run every channel at full blast.
First establish a stable work level, then process.
Further information:
Headroom strategies, mixbus reserve, sources of error (advanced)
Headroom means deliberately leaving some buffer so that transients and mastering work cleanly. This isn't just a mastering issue, but crucial right from the start of the mix.
Further information:
Balance: Volume, Pan, Stereo & Mono
Many mixes get "ruined" with excessive EQ because the balance was never right. If the volume and panning are correct, many problems resolve themselves.
Volume balance
Start with faders, not plugins.
Work in sections: verse, chorus, bridge.
Use references, but adjust the listening volume.
Further information:
Stereo distribution & mono compatibility
A wide mix is worthless if it collapses into mono. Control means: you can consciously shape stereo and consciously test mono.
Further information:
Phase / Phase correlation
Phase problems are often invisible, but audible: thin bass, unstable midrange, undefined width.
Further information:
Sound shaping: EQ, resonances, masking
EQ isn't a "make it pretty" button. In mixing, EQ is primarily about space management: you create space in the frequency spectrum, reduce masking, and shape tonality.
EQ Basics & Filters (Beginner)
Use high-pass/low-pass filters effectively.
It's better to lower levels in a targeted way than to boost them across the board.
Identify problems first, then correct them.
Further information:
Resonances, phases, linear filters (advanced)
Resonances and poor filter choices can make mixes sound harsh, nasal, or "hollow." Especially with low-cut filters, the EQ type (linear vs. minimum-phase) can have audible consequences.
Further information:
Dynamics: Compression, parallel, sidechain, limiter in the mix
Dynamic processing provides control, punch, and stability. However, it's also the quickest shortcut to a "flat" mix if you overdo it.
Understanding and using compression
Attack/Release determines transients and groove.
Compression is a tool, not a mandatory step.
First define the goal: more stability, more punch, more density?
Further information:
Parallel Compression (New York)
Parallel compression is often more sensible than "flattening everything". You add density in a controlled way without destroying transients.
Further information:
Sidechain (kick/bass, de-esser workaround, creating space)
Sidechaining isn't just about pumping. You can use it to resolve competition in the frequency range and guide elements past each other.
Further information:
Limiters in the mix: when are they useful, when are they a mistake?
Using a limiter in the mixdown is a common mistake if you need headroom later during mastering. It can work as a creative tool or for rough loudness, but only with a clear intention.
Further information:
Spatiality: Reverb, delay, depth and width
Spatial space determines whether a mix appears "large" or muddy. It's important that space doesn't work against clarity.
Reverb Basics (Beginners)
Reverb adds depth, but it can also create masking.
Less wet content is often more.
Pre-delay helps to keep the direct signal clear.
Further information:
Depth layering & width (Advanced)
Depth of field is created through level, EQ, transients, reverb/delay, and stereo decisions. Width is good as long as the center remains stable.
Further information:
Automation & musical arc
Automation is the bridge between "technically correct" and "emotionally right." Many problems can be solved more cleanly with automation than with more compression.
Volume automation
Stabilize vocals without over-compressing them.
Slightly boost the chorus instead of trying to master everything louder.
Consciously design transitions.
Further information:
FX automation (delay throws, reverb moments)
The effects are localized rather than permanent.
Control FX returns, otherwise the mix will quickly become "mushy".
Content gap (recommended as a new core article):
Automation in the music mix (vocals, FX throws, clip gain vs volume automation): 👉 Coming soon
Subgroups, stems, top-down & mixbus strategies
Subgroups are the organizational and control center of the mix. Top-down mixing is an approach that leads you to a cohesive musical picture more quickly. The mix bus is a tool for "glue," not for mastering loudness.
Using stems/subgroups correctly
Further information:
Top-down mixing
Further information:
Mixbus: Glue, but not a replacement for mastering
What's missing here is a clear, dedicated anchor article that explains the boundaries and best practices in Mixbus.
Content gap (highly recommended):
Mixbus strategies (glue, typical mistakes, sensible chains): 👉 Coming soon
Typical mixing problems & quick solutions
If your mix doesn't sound "professional," it's rarely due to a single plugin. It's usually a recurring problem. Use this section like a diagnostic menu.
Muddy/Mumpf (Low-Mids)
Typical cause: too many sources in the same area, too little space in the frequency and stereo image.
Further information:
Kick/bass conflicts
What usually helps here is: clear roles, frequency separation, sidechaining or automation.
Further information:
Vocals are off / Sibilance / Presence
Often it's a mix of: incorrect level, masking, too much reverb, lack of automation.
Further information:
Properly handling de-essers/sibalance (de-esser vs. dynamic EQ vs. multiband): 👉Coming soon
Stereo appears unstable / phase
If the sound "tips off" in mono, there is almost always a phase or stereo problem.
Further information:
Noise / humming / artifacts
Noise often only becomes audible through compression, EQ boosts, or format conversion.
Further information:
Genre mixing: context instead of rules
Genres define expectations: low-end density, vocal position, transients, spatial aspect. Use these aspects as a "style lens" for your decisions.
Direct genre pages:
Additional blog posts:
Export & Handover
A mix is only "finished" when it has been exported cleanly from a technical standpoint. Errors in the export process reduce quality and make subsequent steps unnecessarily difficult.
Mixdown formats, sample rate, bit depth
For quality: WAV/AIFF instead of MP3.
Sample rate appropriate for the project.
Choose the appropriate bit depth depending on the workflow.
Further information:
Export stems (for handover, remixes, mastering options)
Further information:
Checklist: Avoid mistakes
If you plan to have your mix mastered later, this checklist is a handy bridge.
Further information:
Once your mix is finished, the next step is mastering. Here, loudness, dynamics, and frequency balance are optimized so that your song works reliably on all platforms. Continue here: Mastering Guide: Loudness, Preparation & Special Topics.