Mix Engineer

Role

Balances dialogue, music, effects, ambience, and other sound elements into a coherent mix.

Description

A Mix Engineer runs the mix as a technical craft: session setup, stem management, level and dynamics work, loudness standards, and delivery in every format the project needs — stereo, binaural, multichannel, middleware-ready stems.

Immersive delivery multiplies the formats. The same material may need to hold up on headset speakers, studio headphones, a gallery speaker array, and a phone, and a mix that translates across all of them is built, not hoped for. Checking translation across playback systems is a standing part of the job.

Discipline-Specific Description

Within sound production, the mix engineer is the person at the desk making the technical decisions that let balance judgments actually reach the audience intact.

Scope Note

Typically includes mix session setup and management, stem organization and delivery, level, EQ, and dynamics work, loudness compliance for each target platform, format conversions, and translation checks across playback systems.

Boundary Note

The Mix Engineer and the Sound Mixer overlap heavily, and on most productions they are one person. The guide keeps them apart because the competencies differ: engineering the mix — sessions, stems, standards, deliverables — is this role; judging the final balance is the Sound Mixer's center. Interactive mix behavior inside the engine belongs to implementation and technical audio roles.

Collaboration Note

Works with sound mixers and designers, composers, dialogue editors, implementation audio designers who receive the stems, and the platforms or venues whose delivery specs set the targets.

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