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Newbie dude
New member
Do you take all your songs, put them on one really long track, and give it all the same EQ?
Newbie dude said:Do you take all your songs, put them on one really long track, and give it all the same EQ?
Not if you are asking this question.Newbie dude said:So it's not possible to master your own music?
1) You listen to the mixes.How do you master a CD?
Yareek said:On a different level, when you are mastering an entire album, do you guys master each track individually, then lay them next to one another and tweak?
I'm thinking that setting them up as stereo tracks with separate eq/compression on each track would help the continuity...
masteringhouse said:Absolutely EQ and compress each individually.
They can be setup as one continuous track in the order of the CD or as multiple stereo tracks (that's my approach). Using multiple stereo tracks I can jump from one track to any other other by muting and automate/process them separately as needed. Once I'm done processing I order and edit the tracks.
Yareek said:Cool...that's exactly how I envisioned it in my head.
What about final limiting/dithering? If you were to do this all ITB (I have not outboard gear), would you EQ/Compress/etc each track on its own inserts and put the final limiter and dither on the master buss? I can't see a problem with that so long as the levels are consistent from track to track (i.e. using the limiter actually as a limiter instead of volume maximizing).
masteringhouse said:Limiting is another process that should be done on a per song basis. Dithering should be fine on the master buss, unless you plan on editing/fading later. In which case it should be done after the edits/fades.
Personally I bounce to 24 bit, pull these into my CD editing software and dither within that. That way if edits or fades need to be changed I can do it more quickly and easily.
Yareek said:Ah...that makes sense.
So for instance if I'm working in SONAR, I'd do all of my sound editing track to track, include EQ, compression, limiting, fades, etc, then I'd export to a 24 bit stereo track, and dither within a mastering program (I'm looking at CD architect).
Thanks!
masteringhouse said:I would save the fades and any potential editing for CD Architect. You can then add a dither plugin in CDA.
punkorama said:speaking of Bob katz's book "Mastering Audio" i HIGHLY recommend it. Great all around book for mastering,tho it does get very complicated in some parts, a very good book i would have to say. P.S. Mastering is WAY more than compressing and raising the volume haha
Yareek said:One more semi-stupid questions, do you fade in/out all of the tracks, even if they don't have musical content? i.e. there's "silence" between tracks, but you still fade that silence in and out to ensure silence?
gullfo said:interestingly enough, Bob Katz in his book recommends not going to total silence since it can make the transition sound strange. presumably you could do this so your fades and cross fades keep a little bit of noise/sound/music/etc... so you have a "perceptual" connection between songs without dropping to complete silence.
I think he called this "ambience recovery" to keep things consistent between tracks - kinda like an audience in a live record, only quieter...![]()
masteringhouse said:Yes, and this is one of the reasons I dither during CD creation. Until you have have the fades "finalized" it doesn't make sense to me to go from 24bit to 16 or dither.