View Full Version : do you place effects over your master channel? think carefully
dirty_bass
21-07-2007, 02:22 AM
I`m doing a an increasing amount of mastering, and one of the most frequently occuring problems in dance music (techno in particular) is compression.
Do you always wack compression over your master outs?
Why?
Is it just to make your tune louder?
If that is the case don`t do it!!!
Especially if you intend for your music to be placed on vinyl.
All your doing is sacrificing headroom and dynamics for apparent loudness.
and the final "loudness" of your tune bears little relation to how loud it will be on vinyl after the mastering cut.
Only use mastering compression if you REALLY understand compression, because you are going to make things very difficult for the mastering or cutting engineer if you don`t, and may end up with a flat, squashed, thin sounding record.
And for gods sake, if you don`t really understand compression at the mastering stage too well, then don`t for any reason use MultiBand compression.
This is a very specialised form of compression, and is generally only used for very specific surgical tasks.
Try to leave your final mixdown with a good 3db of headroom (or cushioning) from peak level to 0db if you can.
Yes your tune will apparently sound quiter (ever heard of a volume knob?), but the spared dynamic headroom will leave more room for play for the cutting engineer or mastering stage, and will leave a far better sounding audio piece.
The same can apply for EQ and any other effect you place over the master.
If you are applying the same effects over the master channels of all your tunes (and applying similar settings each time) then you are effectively putting a standardised template over all your music (which from tune to tune will not be standardised, and will require different or NO application of mastering techniques each time).
THIS IS VERY BAD PRACTICE!!!!
Think before you apply mastering effects.
then think again.
Do you REALLY understand what you are doing?
dirty_bass
21-07-2007, 03:04 AM
And heed this
MASTERING IS NOT A CURE ALL FOR A BAD MIXDOWN.
Mastering is (hopefully) a subtle process of fine tuning, and drastic changes will always end in a compromise.
A good mixdown is the beginning of a great master.
status: surreal
21-07-2007, 05:21 AM
Nice post Steve :)
Do you always wack compression over your master outs?
To get the music pumping either a little or a lot - but that depends on the program material.. dont always use a compressor and the settings are usually mild.
Especially if you intend for your music to be placed on vinyl.
That'd be nice, but i dont have the money (yet)
All your doing is sacrificing headroom and dynamics for apparent loudness.
and the final "loudness" of your tune bears little relation to how loud it will be on vinyl after the mastering cut.
Can you elaborate more please? What would really display this steve would be if you posted up a pre-vinyl track and a recording from the vinyl.. in wav format please so we can see the difference...?
Only use mastering compression if you REALLY understand compression, because you are going to make things very difficult for the mastering or cutting engineer if you don`t, and may end up with a flat, squashed, thin sounding record.
People have to start somewhere and compression as a whole concept is difficult for people to hear in the beginning, because they need to train their ears. But mastering compression is different - its true.
And for gods sake, if you don`t really understand compression at the mastering stage too well, then don`t for any reason use MultiBand compression.
Thats a good point.
This is a very specialised form of compression, and is generally only used for very specific surgical tasks.
Its difficult to convince people of this, esp when the preset from a Multi-B comp makes things sound louder, better and fatter.
Try to leave your final mixdown with a good 3db of headroom (or cushioning) from peak level to 0db if you can.
:laughing: the amount of artists ive seen ram their music all the way up is unreal :laughing:
Yes your tune will apparently sound quiter (ever heard of a volume knob?), but the spared dynamic headroom will leave more room for play for the cutting engineer or mastering stage, and will leave a far better sounding audio piece.
Indeed.
The same can apply for EQ and any other effect you place over the master.
If you are applying the same effects over the master channels of all your tunes (and applying similar settings each time) then you are effectively putting a standardised template over all your music (which from tune to tune will not be standardised, and will require different or NO application of mastering techniques each time).
THIS IS VERY BAD PRACTICE!!!!
Indeed.
Think before you apply mastering effects.
then think again.
Do you REALLY understand what you are doing?
Actually, there is something to add here -
Do you need to master.. AT ALL? A good mixdown will mean that the mastering really is more like a french polish.
rhythmtech
21-07-2007, 02:25 PM
nope never do.
anything i need to do to play out a track ill do in soundforge afterwards..
that way i have a 24bit uncompressed track rendered at -6 to go for mastering as well as my own mastered version for playing out or posting here etc.
dirty_bass
21-07-2007, 07:00 PM
Can you elaborate more please? What would really display this steve would be if you posted up a pre-vinyl track and a recording from the vinyl.. in wav format please so we can see the difference...?
.
Well this was explained to me straight from the cutting engineers mouth.
It`s very simple and logical.
You give them a crushed to death super loud mix with no headroom.
they have to make lots of adjustments for vinyl. your crushed mix will probably need to be cut quiter to retian your horrible crush sound, because the frequency problems are just too extreme in the top and low end to be put to vinyl, and drastic changes to the mix would mean massive compromises over the sound, which no master engineer likes to do, so you end up with a quiter cut.
OR
They have to squeeze and cut into the mix with eq and such, thus delving into the fine balance nightmare seesaw of the mastering stage which will lead to thinning of the mix.
Give them headroom, and they have plenty of room to ramp up the volume of your cut without having to rip the mix to pieces.
Siege
21-07-2007, 08:01 PM
Steve....is it ok for the engineer to recieve an already professionally mastered mix (an unnatended cut for instance)?? or do the problems of not giving headroom still apply?
dirty_bass
21-07-2007, 08:58 PM
Steve....is it ok for the engineer to recieve an already professionally mastered mix (an unnatended cut for instance)?? or do the problems of not giving headroom still apply?
Well, basically, it all depends on who and where you are cutting.
A professionally mastered mix is great for digital media, but for vinyl I would (and do) supply work mixed but unmastered.
Otherwise the track is mastered twice.
If your music is going to a good engineer, with good reputation for you type of music, then I would attend with an unmastered track.
If it was still the good engineer but you ca`nt attend, I would still go with unmastered, and trust their rep.
If it`s a el cheapo press and master, then you would be better of supplying a well mastered track (ask your mastering engineer to master with vinyl in mind).
As el cheapo press and master will just run your tune through basic vinyl prep and nothing else.
One day soon, vinyl will just be unfinancially viable, and then none of us will have to worry about the hideous sonic restrictions of that medium.
Jay Pace
24-07-2007, 01:08 PM
Leaving mastering up to a pro has been the best production tip I've had to date.
Concentrate on the track and the mix. Leave the spit and polish to someone else.
One day soon, vinyl will just be unfinancially viable, and then none of us will have to worry about the hideous sonic restrictions of that medium.
A sad day, maybe not coming as soon as we think but sooner than i'd hoped despite throwing the proverbial eggs into the digi basket... at least the im not riskin said eggs being removed with the vinyl sales knife.
massplanck
24-07-2007, 04:28 PM
Good post. Leave it dry....
judas_beast
25-07-2007, 02:12 AM
A sad day, maybe not coming as soon as we think but sooner than i'd hoped despite throwing the proverbial eggs into the digi basket... at least the im not riskin said eggs being removed with the vinyl sales knife.
Mmmm, eggs.
On a more serious note, I hope vinyl doesn't die too soon, as I REALLY want to get a record out, purely for the ''ohhh a record'' vibe.
But yeah, eggs.
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