I wish your wife well and a full recovery.

Thanks for creating this post. I doubt if you are alone in thinking your mixes are not good. I know I share your concern. smile

"They" (whoever they are) say the best way to learn mixing is to practice, practice, practice. Then there is life and life has a way of reducing the time available to practice. My thoughts:

Band-in-a-Box styles provide a good starting point for mixes. The instruments usually blend well. The Xtra and XPro style packs have especially good mixes. Take what the program gives you and run with it!

+++ Mix Challenge +++ is a FREE website set up to practice mixing. You are mixing tracks and songs you didn't create so you're not locked into what's in your head. You post your mix and you'll receive constructive feedback from other mixers.

+++ EZ Mix2 +++ is a template based software program that helps you obtain a more professional sound.

Finally, if the music you create has similarities, create DAW templates with instruments, plugins and settings that sound good to you. That way you have a consistent starting point and a baseline you can return to while experimenting.


Jim Fogle - 2025 BiaB (Build 1128) RB (Build 5) - Ultra+ PAK
DAWs: Cakewalk Sonar - Standalone: Zoom MRS-8
Laptop: i3 Win 10, 8GB ram 500GB HDD
Desktop: i7 Win 11, 12GB ram 256GB SSD, 4 TB HDD
Music at: https://fogle622.wix.com/fogle622-audio-home