SouthSIDE Glen said:
I'm not a mastering engineer by trade (my emphasis being on recording/mix) by any means, but I do have just my two cents to add to the whole thing:
I'm a young guy at 22, but I've been lucky enough to work with really good world class people. Musicians, engineers, producers and mastering engineers. Along the way I have met up with Bob Katz and I've really gathered a perspective on the mastering process that I feel really lucky to have.
Basically it's the two hemispheres of the perceived world: A) What things *should* and we wish to be like and B) What things are really like.
For me personally, I always feel that a perfect world is where everyone knows how to use thier ears and how to tweak out the room for the best sound, and actually knows what they are doing. Then come time to master, the ME can simply enjoy a light workload for a job well done.
Then there's the real world, the reason we need mastering engineers in the first place. I've heard tons of good work in my few years, but I've heard just as much garbage. Surprisingly the garbage comes in mysterious ways. So in that case, a person like a Bob Katz or a Joe Gastwirt are absolutly nessessary in the equation. And not even on such a world class level, because I've met local ME's that do very well.
A person like Bob, who learned under some pretty heavy people (from what I hear), I saw that above anything, experience was the main factor. But you really have to have the observant gene to get by in that world. To think he was first a recording and mix engineer, just like most of us and then found a niche in mastering. Eventually doing it enough to achieve fulltime status.
But you can see how those stepping stones are directly correlated with his vast knowledge of material over time. It makes sense too, knowing hundreds of different preamps, mics, rooms, setups, different personal styles and studio procedures....it's like the mastering engineer is the top of the pyriamid.
Just like a good captain would have been a sailor first, is how a good mastering engineer would of had the extended experience of the studio world. I don't know if the spiritual part of mastering can really shine without the years of embedded production memories and direct experience with that world first.
It's a shame that alot of studio engineers never get that chance to talk one on one with a good mastering engineer. The finalizer. I think it helps in giving that sense of team and less sense of emancipation.
I personally don't see myself becoming an ME, but I enjoy and appreciate what they do for me and for others. So when I think of it like that, it's harmonius to me. I can exsist comfortably out in the studio world interacting with musicians and know that a responsible ME does exsist and will help build off of the team creation. Almost like working for a cool and wise army general rather than a stupid and gun ho one.
I will leave it at this though...if I did get the best explination of being a well rounded engineer, it was to simply "listen to as much music as you can...and of all types".
It does become easier to build off of something that's embedded in your mind rather than make up something from nothing. Which honestly got me nowhere 95% of the time.
I apologize that I have no useful information. I just always enjoy talking about stuff like engineer and mastering engineer relationships.
