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

  1. Technical requirements for clean mixing

  2. Session preparation & project organization

  3. Gain staging, levels & headroom

  4. Balance: Volume, Pan, Stereo & Mono

  5. Sound shaping: EQ, resonances, masking

  6. Dynamics: Compression, parallel, sidechain, limiter in the mix

  7. Spatiality: Reverb, delay, depth and width

  8. Automation & musical arc

  9. Subgroups, stems, top-down & mixbus strategies

  10. Typical mixing problems & quick solutions

  11. Genre mixing: context instead of rules

  12. Export & Handover

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:

  1. Name the tracks, color-code them, and hide unnecessary takes.

  2. Create groups/buses (drums, bass, music, vocals, FX).

  3. Import reference tracks and adjust them to the same listening volume.

  4. 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.

👉 Genre hub

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.