These days, the noise floor is generally so low, there’s rarely a need to carefully balance the signal-to-noise ratio. In the days of analogue mixing, you’d have to find a balance between getting the sound as high above the noise floor as possible while leaving enough headroom to avoid clipping. Quite frankly, this probably is the source of the myth that Ableton Live doesn’t sound as good as other DAWs. It’s no surprise if you overload the effects whether it’s the native ones or plug-ins. Most people simply turn down the master and call it a day, but then wonder why the mix sounds so crappy. It’s either clipping on the master or even worse, already clipping in individual tracks. However, 80% of the time I’m mixing someone else’s work, I get a mix that’s way too hot. Have you ever noticed that a sound is different when you run it through effects at a high or low level? That’s one of the reasons why gain staging is so crucial.
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