
lpdeluxe
The Precision Bass Guy
Morgan Fairchild's rack I think ...
LOL. I think you've hit on the secret to mastering.
LOL. I think you've hit on the secret to mastering.
Now THAT's some vintage equipment!masteringhouse said:Morgan Fairchild's rack I think ...
masteringhouse said:Morgan Fairchild's rack I think ...
HWB said:I guess thats why its important to develop a relationship with a mastering engineer you trust to make the changes he thinks it needs while still giving you the sound you want. I hope this makes sense but I'm not sure it does. LOL
The only problem I have with what you're saying is that you presume that an ME is injecting their own personality into the work.HWB said:I believe the line between objectivity and subjectivity can get rather blurred. True, its almost impossible to be objective about your own work. On the other hand (four fingers and a thumb) when you send something out to be mastered, even though he can be objective because it isn't his work, he is still very subjective about making it sound the way he thinks it should sound. Thats where the line can get blurred. Everyone has a right to their opinion but everyone isn't right. I would rather be subjective about my own work and have it sound the way i want it to sound than pay someone else to be objective and get it back sounding different than what I wanted it to be. I guess thats why its important to develop a relationship with a mastering engineer you trust to make the changes he thinks it needs while still giving you the sound you want. I hope this makes sense but I'm not sure it does. LOL
Blue Bear Sound said:The only problem I have with what you're saying is that you presume that an ME is injecting their own personality into the work.
In a technical sense, the mark of a good ME is to NOT do that. One of the skills an ME acquires (over time) is a very solid sense of what constitutes "good sound." And they are in a unique position to properly gauge where you mix or someone else's sits in that perspective.
In practical terms, sure everyone has an opinion, but it is actually the ME's job not to force their opinion on a given piece of music, but only to add "polish" as needed.
I think you're only looking at Mastering from the point of view of "rescuing" a bad mix, and not considering the fact that an ME really only tries to draw out the best possible sound -- sometimes that means simply adding "sheen", other times it's a rescue operation....
strmkr said:"Radio ready" and "radio standards" are buzzwords that get thrown around a lot that really don't mean anything. Either something sounds good or it doesn't, I've heard plenty of stuff played on the radio that sound like shit. "Radio ready " is a sales term, a tool to sell production with.
mixandmaster said:And "radio ready" "big label" tunes can sound horrible, too.