From Paul Wickliffe in Mixing Music.
1 - Understand The Limitations Of Mastering - Mastering can improve overall fidelity, augment or diminish specific sonic aspects and punch-up the density with compression. However, as most tracks are submitted as two-track stereo, any positive change for one aspect may negatively impact another. You may wish to hear more ride cymbal, but it will also boost sibilance (the letter S) in the vocals. Changing the EQ of the mix will change the balance as well. In order to submit mixes as close to the finished product as possible…
2 - Compare your mix to the pros - Find CD quality audio from finished, commercial works that sound close to your ideal. Play your mix and the CD simultaneously and switch back and forth while listening. Listen for spectral balance; is your mix brighter, boomy or muddy in comparison? Listen to the sound of each instrument in solo and compare it to the pro recording. Use a moderate volume permitting you to carry on a conversation with someone seated beside you without raising your voice.
3 - Use a full range, well balanced monitoring system - Just because you have a pair of NS-10 monitors, that doesn’t mean you hear everything. You need a pair of neutral sounding un-hyped speakers, preferably with a subwoofer to know everything in your mix. Make sure they are positioned at least three feet from the walls and your room doesn’t “ring” at certain frequencies. Listen while sweeping the Signal Generator plug-in to determine if some frequencies sound louder than others. If there is unevenness, your mixes will likely reflect the inverse of the acoustic anomalies. If you cannot afford professional grade speakers and acoustics, get a good pair of headphones with an extended (but not hyped) bottom end. Headphones are especially good for checking your stereo imaging, as you should be able to locate where the sound appears in the stereo field.
4 - Use a phase meter on the stereo buss - Stereo means more than “using two mics.” You should be able to locate each sound in the stereo field. If it has no center or sounds like it is behind you, it is likely out of phase. That may be a cool effect in headphones, but when you listen in mono, the sound disappears. Remember 1 + (-1) = 0. If you have a piano or an acoustic guitar in stereo, panned wide, put the channels in solo then look at the phase meter. Doing this will make sure your mix has the same balance in mono or stereo.
5 - Send the files in the maximum resolution used in the origin recording - If your multi-track session was a 24-bit / 48 kHz WAV or higher, render your mix file the same format and label it as such. If your CD will be made from files of multiple sample rates, include an advisory of that or put them in separate folders. Do not master from an MP3 unless it is all you’ve got.
6 - Do not use a Maximizer or Peak Limiter on the source files - Leave at least 2 to 3 dB headroom on the rendered file. You can mix with buss compression if you wish to hear its effects, but leave the final compression off when rendering. Distortion in the source file is a bell that cannot be un-rung. Don’t become a casualty in the loudness wars (hint: we all lose).
7 - Clean but don’t clip the head and tail - Leave at least 250 ms of dead air before the first note. It’s good to have some ambiance before the song begins but remove any noise or count-offs if you can. Leave a full ring out at the end, but remove any movement noise or amp buzz if you can. You will get a cleaner board fade if the mastering engineer does it after the compression, just tell him where on the clock to start and end the fade.
8 - Have your text togetherYou need this for the master metadata - CD title, artist listing, song titles in order, UPC and ISRC codes, special index spacing and examples of track crossfades. Titling information appears on CD players with alphanumeric displays, which will also work for radio broadcasts. The ISRC codes are unique serial numbers assigned to each song, which are used for tracking airplay and digital distribution. The UPC code is the bar code on your CD packaging necessary for most retail distribution. Please check all your spelling and grammar because the mastering engineer must assume misspelling is intentional these days. Text will not show up on your computer or iTunes unless the project has been registered at gracenote.com. US residents can get their own ISRC user code at usisrc.org
9 - Choose form of delivery you want - There are four common forms of master delivery: PMCD, DDP, WAV and Mastered for iTunes. A PMCD (pre-master compact disc) is a playable CD from which an identical copy is made into a glass master for pressing CDs. I use top quality media, set a slow burn rate on the CD burner and run an error check on the finished disk. I make two identical disks in one package so that if there’s a microscopic flaw in one disk, it is highly unlikely to occur in the same place twice. The box also contains PQ codes (printout of mastering data). A DDP master (Disk Description Protocol) formats the master as a folder of digital files, one long continuous stereo file of the entire CD and four smaller files, which contain text and timing information. It’s used to send masters to pressing plants halfway around the world via the Internet. WAV files are simply 44.1 kHz / 16 WAV files from which MP3s are made by distribution services like CD Baby. Mastering for iTunes uses their own codec (conversion software) to render superior fidelity and dynamic range for mp3s.
10 - Leave sufficient lead time to get a reference disk and / or master - You want to hear the finished product before you press and want to keep a spare master on hand because the plants don’t often return your master when the are done.
1 - Understand The Limitations Of Mastering - Mastering can improve overall fidelity, augment or diminish specific sonic aspects and punch-up the density with compression. However, as most tracks are submitted as two-track stereo, any positive change for one aspect may negatively impact another. You may wish to hear more ride cymbal, but it will also boost sibilance (the letter S) in the vocals. Changing the EQ of the mix will change the balance as well. In order to submit mixes as close to the finished product as possible…
2 - Compare your mix to the pros - Find CD quality audio from finished, commercial works that sound close to your ideal. Play your mix and the CD simultaneously and switch back and forth while listening. Listen for spectral balance; is your mix brighter, boomy or muddy in comparison? Listen to the sound of each instrument in solo and compare it to the pro recording. Use a moderate volume permitting you to carry on a conversation with someone seated beside you without raising your voice.
3 - Use a full range, well balanced monitoring system - Just because you have a pair of NS-10 monitors, that doesn’t mean you hear everything. You need a pair of neutral sounding un-hyped speakers, preferably with a subwoofer to know everything in your mix. Make sure they are positioned at least three feet from the walls and your room doesn’t “ring” at certain frequencies. Listen while sweeping the Signal Generator plug-in to determine if some frequencies sound louder than others. If there is unevenness, your mixes will likely reflect the inverse of the acoustic anomalies. If you cannot afford professional grade speakers and acoustics, get a good pair of headphones with an extended (but not hyped) bottom end. Headphones are especially good for checking your stereo imaging, as you should be able to locate where the sound appears in the stereo field.
4 - Use a phase meter on the stereo buss - Stereo means more than “using two mics.” You should be able to locate each sound in the stereo field. If it has no center or sounds like it is behind you, it is likely out of phase. That may be a cool effect in headphones, but when you listen in mono, the sound disappears. Remember 1 + (-1) = 0. If you have a piano or an acoustic guitar in stereo, panned wide, put the channels in solo then look at the phase meter. Doing this will make sure your mix has the same balance in mono or stereo.
5 - Send the files in the maximum resolution used in the origin recording - If your multi-track session was a 24-bit / 48 kHz WAV or higher, render your mix file the same format and label it as such. If your CD will be made from files of multiple sample rates, include an advisory of that or put them in separate folders. Do not master from an MP3 unless it is all you’ve got.
6 - Do not use a Maximizer or Peak Limiter on the source files - Leave at least 2 to 3 dB headroom on the rendered file. You can mix with buss compression if you wish to hear its effects, but leave the final compression off when rendering. Distortion in the source file is a bell that cannot be un-rung. Don’t become a casualty in the loudness wars (hint: we all lose).
7 - Clean but don’t clip the head and tail - Leave at least 250 ms of dead air before the first note. It’s good to have some ambiance before the song begins but remove any noise or count-offs if you can. Leave a full ring out at the end, but remove any movement noise or amp buzz if you can. You will get a cleaner board fade if the mastering engineer does it after the compression, just tell him where on the clock to start and end the fade.
8 - Have your text togetherYou need this for the master metadata - CD title, artist listing, song titles in order, UPC and ISRC codes, special index spacing and examples of track crossfades. Titling information appears on CD players with alphanumeric displays, which will also work for radio broadcasts. The ISRC codes are unique serial numbers assigned to each song, which are used for tracking airplay and digital distribution. The UPC code is the bar code on your CD packaging necessary for most retail distribution. Please check all your spelling and grammar because the mastering engineer must assume misspelling is intentional these days. Text will not show up on your computer or iTunes unless the project has been registered at gracenote.com. US residents can get their own ISRC user code at usisrc.org
9 - Choose form of delivery you want - There are four common forms of master delivery: PMCD, DDP, WAV and Mastered for iTunes. A PMCD (pre-master compact disc) is a playable CD from which an identical copy is made into a glass master for pressing CDs. I use top quality media, set a slow burn rate on the CD burner and run an error check on the finished disk. I make two identical disks in one package so that if there’s a microscopic flaw in one disk, it is highly unlikely to occur in the same place twice. The box also contains PQ codes (printout of mastering data). A DDP master (Disk Description Protocol) formats the master as a folder of digital files, one long continuous stereo file of the entire CD and four smaller files, which contain text and timing information. It’s used to send masters to pressing plants halfway around the world via the Internet. WAV files are simply 44.1 kHz / 16 WAV files from which MP3s are made by distribution services like CD Baby. Mastering for iTunes uses their own codec (conversion software) to render superior fidelity and dynamic range for mp3s.
10 - Leave sufficient lead time to get a reference disk and / or master - You want to hear the finished product before you press and want to keep a spare master on hand because the plants don’t often return your master when the are done.