Hi, how are you doing? Justin is here with quick tip for you, and today: put on someone else's shoes, I don't mean literally putting. Somebody else's shoes on. That would be a little bit weird! What I'm talking about here is: getting a different perspective on things. Now this links back to the idea that I talked previously about recording yourself Especially when you're recording yourself. Sometimes it can be difficult to be objective. Songwriters have it a lot, you know, you've written a tune and you're listening back to it, and you're trying to figure it out if it's good or not. There's lots of instances; whether you like a particular solo, a song, a bridge, the melody, the sound. One of the things I find really helpful I do all the time is put on somebody's else's shoes, or more particularly, close to the point, putting on somebody's else's ears. So if I'm doing a mix, say, I imagine myself a good buddy, Reese, who always used to pull up an amazing mix. When I'm mixing a song, after I've done what I think it is, I'll sit there and go, "Now what would Reese say?" I'm trying to listen with his ears, and I'll go, "He's going to say that the kick drum's too loud, or there's not enough sizzle in the hats, or the guitar's too loud, or the vocal needs to come up. By imagining myself being somebody else, it changes stuff. It's a really effective tool, and it's a very odd one. I found it on a prev record I was doing, I was working with a producer who used to call guitar solos with too many notes "Ernie", maybe there was too much "Ernie" involved. So that's something I still use if I'm recording a guitar solo for myself or someone else's record, I'm listening back to it and I'm thinking, now is there too much "Ernie" in it, is there too much little widdly bits, or is it okay? Because you get attached to stuff, as a guitar player, I'm like, that's a really awesome lick, but you gotta think of it from the song perspective. Is that lick fitting the song? No matter how cool it is, if it's in the wrong song, it's not cool anymore. By stepping back out from myself, and trying to be objective with what I'm doing, I'm going, okay, is that really the right thing there? Is that right or should I change it? What would Thessa say, with "Ernie"? For songwriting, it's something I do all the time. When I'm writing a tune, and I've recorded it, I listen back to it, and I start listening back to it as if I was other people, depending on what kind of tune it is, or how I'm feeling, or who I'm respecting at the time. I'm always trying to pick people that I really respect and whose ears I admire, and go, well, is that bridge really good enough? Is it linking in okay? And I'll be going, well, it is and it isn't, and of course because I created it, I'm already attached to it emotionally. Stepping back and going, okay, what would James Taylor be thinking, if he was doing that? Do you think it would work for him? Trying to step back away from the things, it really increases your perspective, because as musicians, we get attached to stuff. I always feel bad if I'm critiquing somebody's song, because it's like calling their kid ugly. No matter how ugly your kids are, you don't want hear that they're ugly. They're still beautiful to you, and it's the same with writing a song. You're attached to it. You don't want to hear from somebody that your song is no good. So rather than try to embarrass somebody by asking them for a critique, you can try and be the critic yourself, and go, let's get really honest here, and if I was playing it to this guy, what would they say? What would they hear that I'm not hearing? Is it good enough, really, you know? This is a really, really cool technique. I've been using it for 10 or 15 years. I've been trying to step out from my own perspective to listen. It nearly always fixes stuff, even things that I wouldn't have noticed, stuff that, maybe because I've played it and I'm involved, or maybe I just wouldn't have thought of it, until I step into that other mode. Well, I hope this little quick tip increases your persepective on music. It's a really cool idea, do give it a try. I'll see you for plenty more lessons, and quick tips, and songs, and all kinds of stuff very soon. Take care of yourselves, bye bye.