Once the basics are in place, these advanced techniques separate a good mix from a great one. They address the hardest problems in mixing: frequency masking, stereo width, and dynamic separation.

Unmasking Strategy

Masking happens when two or more instruments occupy the same frequency range, causing one to bury the other. Here’s how to fix it at every level:

Track-to-Track

Stem-to-Stem

The Parallel Bandpass Trick

This is one of the most powerful unmasking techniques in mixing. It uses phase cancellation to carve space dynamically:

  1. Create a parallel aux with a bandpass filter on the clashing frequency.
  2. Send both competing sources to it (e.g., snare + guitars).
  3. Flip polarity on the source you want less of in that band.
  4. Result: one source gets a ~+6 dB reinforcement, the other gets a notch (cancellation) at that frequency.
  5. Add an expander (set aggressively) on the aux so the effect moves dynamically with the music.

Example: Snare vs. guitars → bandpass the fundamental → flip polarity on guitars send → snare pops, guitars carve out space.


Mid/Side Processing

Mid/Side processing lets you treat the center and sides of your mix independently. Use it when instruments are fighting for the same space in the stereo field.


Parallel Bandpass Shaping (Drums)

This technique enhances drum tone and presence by isolating each drum’s fundamental frequency on separate parallel aux tracks: