“you’ve really worked your magic on this one haven’t you – i love the outcome!”

A little before and after mixing video for Beth Sarah’s song Collide.

Beth had done a great job of recording Collide on her home setup but she really wanted this dreamy, lush folky song about being in love to sound more rich, deep and textured and have more of a spacious & immersive feel. It took me a day to mix as well as adding soft synth bass, chimes and some subtle, extra strings. What do you think? Hopefully that it sounds better 

new release – the end by cherry june

Mixing & additional production by me

Really enjoyed working on The End by Cherry June which came out on 27th June. A poignant, melancholy & dreamy indie folk song inspired by Phoebe Bridgers & Lucy Dacus. Written & recorded by Cherry June. Additional production, mixing & mastering by me. Bass, drums & synths by me. Guitars, vocals & synths by Cherry June.

new release – collide by beth sarah

Mixing & additional production by me

It was a real pleasure to work on this lush, dreamy folk song by my super talented friend and artist Beth Sarah. A soft & beautiful ode to being in love. Out today.
Written, recorded & performed by Beth Sarah. Mixing & additional production by me. Guitars, keys, strings & vocals by Beth. Synth bass, chimes & synths by me.

Stream on Spotify

BEFORE & AFTER MIXING FOR CHERRY JUNE – THE END

Give me one day and I’ll transform your demo into the finished beauty it should be. Thanks to Cherry June for trusting me with her nostalgic, dreamy, melancholy indie rock song that she recorded herself at home using Ableton Live. The demo had good foundations & the reference tracks I was given were so on the money! I’m a big Phoebe Bridgers fan and I loved helping this song inhabit a similar sonic space. ‘The End’ is out soon! Get in touch if you need some songs mixed, ready for release…

THE ALTERNATE UNIVERSE OF SMALL MIRACLES BY DAMON BROCK

Damon Brock, Small Miracles. Recorded, arranged, produced and mixed by me. The brief and vision for this was for the source sounds to all be ‘real’ instruments but to use effects, editing and processing to add layers of other-worldly atmospheres. To create a sense of space within an alternate, warped reality. At it’s root, the song has a fairly traditional melody and harmony and Damon didn’t want this EP to veer too far from a ‘band’ sound (I did get a bit carried away on this one tbh). The track count is pretty low & the overall sound feels like a blend of the familiar with the unfamiliar. . Vocals & acoustic guitar by Damon Brock Electric guitars, acoustic guitars, bass, keys, drums & percussion by Steve Baker

Why Self-Producing Artists Struggle to Finish Songs — and How to Fix It

If you’re an artist who writes, records, and produces your own music, you’ve probably experienced the frustrating limbo of having a mostly finished track sitting in your DAW — weeks (or months) after the initial inspiration.

The core idea is strong.
The parts are mostly there.
But something’s not clicking — and you can’t quite tell why.

You tweak the snare. You double the chorus vocal. You throw another plugin on the master bus. And still, the track doesn’t feel done.

Sound familiar?

You’re not broken. You’re just doing too many jobs at once — and here’s what to do about it.

The 3 Big Reasons Self-Producers Struggle to Finish Songs

1. You’re Too Close to It

When you’ve spent hours recording, editing, comping, and mixing your own track, your brain stops being able to hear it objectively. This is real. It’s called listener fatigue — but it’s also emotional bias (‘demo-itis’). You’re attached to the work because you built it from scratch.

You start to lose the ability to tell whether the vocal’s too loud or just louder than you’re used to. Whether that middle eight is actually boring or you’re just sick of hearing it.

2. You Don’t Have a Clear Finish Line

Most self-producing artists know how to start — but not how to finish. You chase a vibe, build out a section, add parts… and then what? How do you know when it’s enough?

Without an outside perspective or a clear goal, you can fall into endless tinkering mode. This is where good songs go to die.

3. You’re Playing Too Many Roles

You’re being the songwriter, the arranger, the producer, the engineer, and the mixer. That’s a lot of hats — and none of them are getting your full attention.

It’s like trying to write a novel, design the cover, edit the manuscript, typeset the pages, and do the marketing… all at once. Even if you can do all those things, should you?

How to Fix It (Without Selling Your Soul to a Label or an Algorithm)

1. Define the Goal Before You Hit Record

Is this a single you plan to release? A song for your EP? A sketch to send to a collaborator?

Knowing what job the song needs to do helps you make better decisions and avoid the “maybe I should add a sax solo?” spiral.

2. Bring in an Outside Ear

This doesn’t have to mean giving up creative control. It means letting someone else hear the song with fresh ears and help you make decisions — even if that’s just “this part’s working, this part isn’t.”

A good producer or mix engineer (hello 👋) helps you keep the emotion intact while solving the technical and creative problems you’re too deep inside to see.

3. Work in Stages, Not Spirals

Set yourself mini-deadlines:

  • Song is written = done
  • Rough production is done = done
  • Arrangement locked = done 
  • Mixing tweaks only = done

Each of these stages a decision point. Every time you say “done,” you get closer to releasing. Avoid the endless loop of “what if” by making one choice at a time.

Bottom Line: Finishing Is a Skill — and a Team Sport

If you’re making music alone, it’s easy to think you should be able to do it all

But the truth is, every great record is finished by more than one person — even the ones that sound DIY.

So if you’re stuck, it doesn’t mean you’re not good enough. It just means you’re ready for that next level of collaboration. And that’s where I come in.

If you’ve got a track in limbo, send it my way — I’ll tell you what it needs (and what it doesn’t). No pressure. Just honest ears and a plan to help you finish.