I believe in natural talents. My 1st mix ever sounds leaps and bounds better than my old bass player's mix of the same song, and he went to recording school and has been working at a studio full time for almost a year.
And that's everyone's opinion, not just mine.
This.
I have friends in Full Sail. I think I said something about this story before.
We tracked 2 weekends ago for their other band that I'm not part of. A breakdown band that's been played out. OK, fine. I always love working on my recording and mixing so I told them to come down to my hour.
I heard previous attempts at recording the song by the graduate of full sail... It was bad. He sent me the multi tracks of another song that he wrote for teh other band that I am in and I saw the DIs... They were clipping so hard I told him I couldn't even stand to try and learn the song from it...
Anyways, to make this long drawn out story short, They came down, we tracked and they were astonished. They couldn't believe how it sounded so good. I laughed and thought they were joking. I didn't reamp anything or sample the drums or anything and they were blown away at how great it sounded.
Moral of the story: Even when you pay 60k dollars for a recording "degree", it doesn't mean you are going to have it. Obviously recording consists of a lot of black and white facts, but there is an entire portion of mixing and recording that is still creative, and schools can't teach you that. I think it all boils down to whether or not you can pay attention to details well enough. Because someone said it on here before, but what makes a great mix stand out from a decent mix could be like .1db on the vocal track, and if you aren't paying attention to the subtleties of the mix, you'll never address it.