underwater research and design

Production, Mixing, Mastering

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5 Reviews
underwater research and design on SoundBetter

As a mixer I want to help other musicians make interesting, emotional, and impactful sounding art. I tend to work on darkwave, shoegaze, experimental electronic, and alternative pop music, but I love a great lo-fi acoustic singer-songwriter too. I treat each mix with individualized care and I only work on music that I actually like.

My name is Jeremy Wilkins. I am a mix engineer, producer, and keyboardist. My 30 years of experience began in Florida with my first bands; Rosewater Elizabeth and underwater, then continued through several projects and a few cities to eventually land in Portland where I run my boutique home studio, underwater research and design, and am part of the art-pop trio, We Are Parasols. All along the way I've found the time and passion to regularly work with other artists, helping to record, produce, and mix their ideas into being. I have extensive knowledge and skills for producing, arranging, and recording, including vocal recording, editing, and fine tuning.

I spent many years being dissapointed with how other people mixed and mastered my music so I decided to start doing it myself. Then, I spent awhile feeling like a failure, realizing how hard it is, especially as an artist to mix my own music. But over the past decade I have focused intensely on learning the craft, mastering the technology, and becoming a skillful and creative mix engineer. I want to use everything I've learned to help other artists avoid the mixing and mastering distress that I've been through.

I mix in an acoustically treated room with Focal Solo6 Be monitors and a Focal sub.

Here are some mix examples - https://open.spotify.com/playlist/4DnSF2v1Sj7DXoCxkajOrE?si=23a3b93efc024d4d

Contact me through the green button above and let's get to work.

Credits

Discogs verified credits for Jeremy Wilkins
  • Newphasemusic
  • Rosewater Elizabeth
  • Various
  • bdRm
  • Newphasemusic
  • Hawks Do Not Share
  • Hawks Do Not Share
  • Darkswoon
  • Darkswoon
  • Rosewater Elizabeth
  • Underwater
  • Hawks Do Not Share
  • bdRm
  • XiBLiNG
  • Xibling
  • Hawks Do Not Share
  • Last Ice
  • We Are Parasols
  • Luscious Apparatus
  • We Are Parasols
  • Darkswoon
  • We Are Parasols
  • Rosewater Elizabeth
  • Rosewater Elizabeth
  • Underwater
  • Underwater
  • Various
  • Hello Dragon
  • Obsidian Kingdom
  • Hawks Do Not Share
  • We Are Parasols
  • bdRm
  • XiBLiNG
  • Xibling
  • XiBLiNG
  • Hawks Do Not Share
  • Hawks Do Not Share
  • Last Ice
  • bdRm
  • Luscious Apparatus
  • We Are Parasols
  • Darkswoon
  • We Are Parasols

5 Reviews

Endorse underwater research and design
  1. Review by Charlie
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    by Charlie

    Jeremy has the best ears of anyone I know. His mixing ability is unparalleled and he's the most professional, efficient, and communicative sound engineer one could ask for. He listens, he's patient, and he makes sure you're getting the exact sound you're going for. I refer everyone to him and I can't say enough good things about him and his work.

  2. Review by Darkswoon
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    by Darkswoon

    I've never felt so comfortable with an engineer/producer as I have working with Jeremy. He's responsive, communicative, patient and open within his approach to this craft. He will tweak until it's right and carve out the very best from a mix. I've worked with him on several projects and have been really happy with the process and the product each time. Jeremy is creative, intuitive, passionate and tireless with his work. 100% recommend!

  3. Review by Xibling
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    by Xibling

    Jeremy is diligent, patient and keenly thoughtful in the studio. He makes the tiresome technical side into a fine art, so you don’t have to. Work with him to finely capture your most precious audio visions.

  4. Review by Matt
    starstarstarstarstar
    by Matt

    I've mixed my own work for many years and never considered handing it over to someone else to mix, but I'm glad that I did. I couldn't be happier with Jeremy's work on our latest EP. It was clear from the first rough mix he shared that he was listening to our songs and trying to help us realize them with the mix. Jeremy highlighted parts of the compositions that I wouldn't have thought to bring out, and he was open to feedback throughout the process. We're stoked with the results.

  5. Review by Preston Maddox
    starstarstarstarstar
    by Preston Maddox

    Jeremy is top tier audio engineer. He intuitively knows how to showcase the best parts of a song, all while delivering stellar mix quality and fidelity, at a fair rate and with a quick turnaround. Highly recommended.

Interview with underwater research and design

  1. Q: Tell us about a project you worked on you are especially proud of and why. What was your role?

  2. A: "Bloom Decay" by Darkswoon - Because Jana's voice and songwriting/lyrics are impeccable. I find Nora's integration of metal and punk style bass parts into the band's electronic-based darkwave fascinating. Like every band that I truly love they don't fit squarely into any specific genre or sound like anyone else. I co-produced and mixed the record. I also added additional instruments (synths, guitar, and drum programming) to most of the songs. My wife, D, did all of the vocal editing. It was really wonderful to work with a group of people that I truly admire and care about.

  3. Q: Describe the most common type of work you do for your clients.

  4. A: I am currently trying to focus on mixing because I think that's where I can add the most value to most projects. Also, because it excites me the most and being excited about your work is key to doing a good job. I like to bring out, not only, the elements that should get the primary focus in a mix, but to emphasize the unique elements that make the song special or different from other tracks by the artist or of the genre. Recently, I find myself working in a sort of hybrid way combining mixing with additional production. Only if the client requests and wants the production help, and many do, I find myself making edit or arrangement suggestions while mixing or adding additional instruments to the mix to fill out the sound. I only do this when the client approves or desires it. But if everyone is on board it is very fun and tends to yield great result. Many clients want mixing and mastering done together and occasionally, under the right conditions, I will agree to do both. But, in general, I prefer not to master a project that I have mixed. I fully endorse the idea that mastering serves as the final quality check and it's really important for someone with fresh ears to tackle that role. So, I won't master something I've mixed just to make a little more money! I want what is best for the music.

  5. Q: Analog or digital and why?

  6. A: I work entirely in the box. Everything I do is digital and has been for a very long time. For mixing the ability to instantly recall in digital is something I don't think I could ever give up. I don't like mixing one track at a time. I like to jump around and work on a very circular fashion. But I don't agree with the debate in general. Analog and digital are both great. Use whatever you want to use to make the music you need to make. I would rather not deal with tape but if that makes you happy then go for it! Just print WAV files if you want me to mix it. HAHA.

  7. Q: What are you working on at the moment?

  8. A: I'm mixing the next Bloody Knives record and remixing most of the We Are Parasols catalog at 96k for an upcoming Patreon project.

  9. Q: Is there anyone on SoundBetter you know and would recommend to your clients?

  10. A: There are two mastering engineers in Portland that I recommend all my clients go to when possible - Adam Gonsalves and Amy Dragon. They both work at Telegraph Mastering. I've known Adam for a few years now and I have total faith in him to get my mixes across the finish line with this amazing mastering. He masters all of my personal projects. I've only worked with Amy once so far but it was on the recent Darkswoon album, which is one of my favorite records that I've had the honor of working on.

  11. Q: What was your career path? How long have you been doing this?

  12. A: I've been an independent musician since the early 90s. So, I've been doing some variation of this most of my life.

  13. Q: How would you describe your style?

  14. A: Black denim and cotton.

  15. Q: What type of music do you usually work on?

  16. A: Most people consider everything I work on to be on the darker side of music. Much of it doesn't fit nicely into a particular genre. But I'd say dream-pop, shoegaze, indie-electronic, experimental, darkwave, post-punk, and alternative folk cover the general territory.

  17. Q: What's your strongest skill?

  18. A: Collaboration

  19. Q: Tell us about your studio setup.

  20. A: I work out of a home studio. I always have. I've never even had a separate rehearsal space for any of my bands! This is why one of my various musical projects is called bdRm (or bedroom). My current space is acoustically treated and I have Focal monitors, including a sub. It's not very big, just enough room for my desk and a wall of synths, so I don't record other artists here very much. When I do it's usually solo artists or electronic-based groups that I'm fairly friendly with or vocal recording and overdubs which is something many artists still need help with these days. I really try to focus on remote mixing,

  21. Q: What other musicians or music production professionals inspire you?

  22. A: Brian Eno, Alan Moulder, Flood, Tchad Blake, and Trent Reznor

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"Bloom Decay" by Darkswoon

I was the Mixing Engineer and Co-Producer in this production

Terms Of Service

Revisions as needed. Turn around time is project dependent, based on your deadlines, and will be discussed upfront.

GenresSounds Like
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  • Garbage
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