

You will not be cla at watch vids of CLA, you need to put your hand in the **** ! Having deeply analysed them, by recording the samed track with the same gtr, same amps, I can tell you that except the cut of HI Q at 3,2khz the rest of it is low shelf boost 100hz and Hi self I said, make your homework. Sorry man, but regarding CLA E-VER-Y-THING is on the net. If you want scoop sound cut at 400hz, if it is too harsh cut hi q at 3,2Khz. Gtr : Steven says gtr are raw eq wise! So maybe the are comped, but in the end cla boost 1,5K or 8K on hi shelf and, 100Hz on lows. Vocal : pre-leveling (it means, smoothing between hi level and low level manually) Moreover, ask to yourself what it is prepping. Are you an engineer ? Because, if you know a little about L1, you will clearly see when it is used.

We can't know as there is no L1 in the project.I'll ask you a question. The stereo guitar comp has ton of guitars. You can understand it at hearing the session. No need to speak 3hours on why he puts 15db of high on drums. CLA mix very quickly as in Mixwiththemaster. Sorry for bringing in the negative opinion, just wanted to express my thoughts on the matter:PTotally disagree. Sorry for bringing in the negative opinion, just wanted to express my thoughts on the matter:PĮDIT: oh, the whole point was that home recording made easy costs 15 dollar and Grahams course about 150 from what I remember, at the same range as the slate video but with lot more included content My point is that this Lord Alge course will probably give a couple of neat tips for mixing but at under an hour, it can't possibly compete with other products online at that price that really shows you how a pro works through the whole project. Graham at Recording Revolution has similar courses albeit at a little higher price. Stems included just as in the slate course and best of all - he uses A LOT of slate products:D. ) 11 hours of training where the tutor shows how he mixes a whole song LIVE and not focusing on specific settings but how the tracks' SOUND changes when turning the knobs. But look at other internet courses such as "Mixing Made Easy Vol. Sure you get the tracks to mix and with the introductory price of the free week/year of plugins that is good value. A mix engineer to just point out specific settings at specific tracks has been done before by a lot of great mix engineers - such as Steven - for free on the net a thousand times before. But this course just isn't competitively priced based on what I've seen so far the free tutorial and the knowledge that it is under an hour long.

Own almost all his products and they are all up there with my absolute favourites.

I have a profound respect for Steven and what his doing with the CHEAP analogue revival. Gonna sound like a lousy sales man but here goes:
