Mixing Hip Hop Vocals(A deRaNged Tutorial)

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This is an amazing thread! Could someone go into more detail about the -12db standard for all tracks. It seems that would be too quiet.

I record over one stereo track beat (haven't gotten into tracking the whole project out in one DAW yet) and a lot of the time these beats come to me already pushing close to 0dbs. I normally drop them down to about -3dbs by normalizing. Then keep my vocals between -3 or -6. Sometimes I notice the output still goes in the red even though the vocals aren't loud in relation to the beat. I'm really trying to grasp a good concept on balancing sounds. I understand basics on compression and eq on vocals, but I guess I skipped the lesson on fader treatment. The source of my problem is sometimes a bad mix on the beat, the wav file appears and sounds overly compressed. I don't know how to get around this.

For example. I'm working with one song and the beat is really compressed, I messed around with eq to get it sounding a little better, but it crowds out the vocals no matter what. I have it at -3db right now and there is almost no dynamics (i'm guessing thats the correct term) throughout the track (its mostly all one level through the entire track). When I boost my vocals to finally stand out, it goes in the red.

But even for good mixed beats, a better understanding of volume would help me a lot. So a more in depth explanation of this -12db thing would be great. Sorry for rambling, I'm bad at summarizing my thoughts.

EDIT: maybe i'm confused about my understanding of rms.

EDIT: Ok so I kinda figured out the reasoning. Its to make more headroom for the final master correct? I'm gonna work on the problematic song and see if I can fix it.
 
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is there a place where i can learn what all the mixing and mastering tools do. Like I want to know how compresses, limiters, etc.
 
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