W
wufei
New member
Im trying to master my own song and Im confuse. Do you really need compression or can you master without it? thanks
Why do you want to compress?
If you cannot answer that (or your answer is "because the book told me to") then don't.
End of story.
Compression has more to do with the "loud" sound of the 90s and 00s than it does with the warm sound of the 60s.
There's no single right answer to your compression question--the best thing would be to try your mix in various ways to see what you like--but when you try it, listen to your mix on the stereo in a moving car and on earbuds from your iPod walking down the street.
Not using compression will give you a wide dynamic range that lets your mix "breath" but, when listening in typical noisy locations you may have to have the volume uncomfortably loud on the average bits so as not to lose the quiet bits. On the other hand, over compression can leave your mix sounding rather flat--but it'll be more similar to most commercial masters.
So, rather than books or even advice here...just do some tests and see what sound right to YOU.
Often times in the "warm 60's", at least as far as The Beatles were concerned, the masters weren't usually compressed, but the individual tracks in the mix were. They slammed those Fairchilds like crazy, that's when they worked best. Other studios using LA-2As and 1176 compressors, those were usually slammed too. That's where the magic happens.
Leave the overall 2-buss alone as far as compression.
I mix for my LP and master for the CD.
Well right, the way he said it was kinda dumb though.