Mix Roastby M Street Music

Mix Feedback for Music Students

You're studying audio engineering, music production, or sound design — and the fastest way to learn mixing is by doing it and getting feedback. Textbooks teach theory, but hearing exactly how your EQ decisions affected the frequency balance or how your compression changed the dynamics builds the intuition that separates students from professionals. Use our analysis as your always-available teaching assistant.

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Your Typical Mixing Challenges

Can Hear Something Is Wrong but Can't Identify What

You know your mix doesn't sound right, but you can't pinpoint the specific frequency range, instrument, or processing decision that's causing the problem. Developing the ear-to-brain connection between hearing an issue and diagnosing it is the core skill students need to build.

Struggle to Connect Theory to Practice

You understand how a compressor works in theory — ratio, threshold, attack, release — but when you're actually mixing, you can't hear the difference between a 3:1 and 6:1 ratio on your vocal. The gap between conceptual knowledge and applied skill feels enormous.

No Benchmark for "Good Enough"

Your professor says "the vocal needs more presence" but you don't know how much is enough. Without objective measurements alongside subjective evaluation, you're always guessing whether your adjustment actually solved the problem or created a new one.

Limited Access to Professional Feedback

Your instructor reviews your work once a week, classmates are learning too, and professional engineers aren't available for every question. The feedback loop is too slow — by the time you get notes on mix 1, you've already made the same mistakes on mixes 2, 3, and 4.

Difficulty Hearing Differences in A/B Comparisons

When comparing your mix to a reference or before/after a plugin change, you're not sure what to listen for. Your ear hasn't been trained to isolate specific frequency ranges, dynamics characteristics, or stereo behaviors the way an experienced engineer can.

How RoastYourMix Helps You

  • Break down your mix into specific, measurable parameters — turning vague "sounds off" into concrete frequency and dynamics data
  • Accelerate your ear training by connecting what you hear subjectively to what the analysis shows objectively
  • Provide instant feedback on every mix iteration so your learning loop is minutes, not days
  • Give you vocabulary and understanding to communicate about mix issues using professional terminology
  • Track your progress over time as your mixes consistently score higher on the metrics that matter

What We Analyze for You

Frequency spectrum analysisDynamic range measurementStereo imaging visualizationLUFS loudness levelCrest factor (peak-to-RMS)Tonal balance curveMono compatibility

Our Recommendation for You

Free Roast

The Free tier is a perfect study companion — it gives you a health score and three prioritized issues to work on for each mix. As a student, practicing the cycle of mix, analyze, fix, repeat is more valuable than reading a 50-metric report. Once you're comfortable with the basics and want deeper analysis for advanced coursework, upgrade to Pro.

Frequently Asked Questions

Many students do. Our analysis provides objective data that complements instructor feedback — showing frequency plots, loudness measurements, and dynamic range statistics. Some instructors even assign our reports as a self-evaluation exercise. Check with your program, but the analysis makes a great addition to any mixing portfolio.

The key is the feedback loop: listen to your mix, form an opinion, then check the analysis. Over time, you'll start predicting what the analysis will say before you see it — that's ear training working. The objective data confirms or corrects your subjective impressions, building reliable instincts faster than listening alone.

Upload both, separately. Analyze the rough mix to catch fundamental issues early (arrangement, balance, tonal problems), then analyze the final mix to see how effectively you addressed them. Comparing the two analyses is itself a learning exercise that shows your growth within a single project.

No — and it shouldn't. Our analysis is a feedback tool, not a mixing substitute. You still need to learn EQ, compression, gain staging, and routing. But having instant, objective feedback on every mix you do accelerates the learning process enormously. Think of it as a practice partner, not a teacher replacement.

Ready to Level Up Your Mixes?

Join thousands of music students who use RoastYourMix to improve their sound.

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Free tier available — no credit card required