M
musicdavid
Member
I am referring to the way a CD player will display the gap between the end of one track and the next track mark as a reverse countdown.
I have recently had my album mastered and pressed and have noticed that these countdowns do not take place. The gaps are incorporated into the total length of each track at the end (this doesn't apply to the last track, of course).
I was a bit disappointed, as all my other albums have featured this. All other albums in my collection, in fact.
I realise that it doesn't make a difference to the listener, the countdown doesn't appear on computer playback and - as far as I can tell - CDs with the countdown still incorporate the gap into the total length of the tracks. However, it does bug me in that I feel that this oversight detracts from the professional appearance of my album.
The explanation I have been by my mastering engineer (who has generally done an excellent job) is that the tracks were rendered as one long file (albeit with tracks marks). He told me that enabling the countdown feature involves a separate process but I don't recall the details and to be honest didn't fully understand it when he briefly explained. Something about having to render each track separately? All I know is, for my other albums, the mastering process didn't seem to take as long as this would suggest.
I am going to be doing a repress next week for other reasons so I have the opportunity to redo the DDP image 'with' the countdowns included. My engineer says he never does this even for major label releases, but he is willing to do it for me (although he's not crazy about having to do it and it's something he's not used to).
Am I being over-fussy? Can anyone clarify the process? Any other light to be shed on this?
I have recently had my album mastered and pressed and have noticed that these countdowns do not take place. The gaps are incorporated into the total length of each track at the end (this doesn't apply to the last track, of course).
I was a bit disappointed, as all my other albums have featured this. All other albums in my collection, in fact.
I realise that it doesn't make a difference to the listener, the countdown doesn't appear on computer playback and - as far as I can tell - CDs with the countdown still incorporate the gap into the total length of the tracks. However, it does bug me in that I feel that this oversight detracts from the professional appearance of my album.
The explanation I have been by my mastering engineer (who has generally done an excellent job) is that the tracks were rendered as one long file (albeit with tracks marks). He told me that enabling the countdown feature involves a separate process but I don't recall the details and to be honest didn't fully understand it when he briefly explained. Something about having to render each track separately? All I know is, for my other albums, the mastering process didn't seem to take as long as this would suggest.
I am going to be doing a repress next week for other reasons so I have the opportunity to redo the DDP image 'with' the countdowns included. My engineer says he never does this even for major label releases, but he is willing to do it for me (although he's not crazy about having to do it and it's something he's not used to).
Am I being over-fussy? Can anyone clarify the process? Any other light to be shed on this?