Please help . . .
I have a dilemna:
You see, I've been spending as much as 4 to 8 hours at a time trying to tweek some of my final mixes in preparation for my demo's master copy. My roommate thinks I'm a few fries short of a happy meal the way he sees me strap on the headphones (studio-quality flat-frequency AKG's) and listen to the same song over and over and over again. Sometimes it's just small sections of a song, 1 - 10 seconds in length . . . over and over again. Then, after several hours, I'll take the same mix and play it on the stereo . . . then the boom-box . . . then the car stereo.
Usually, I am making only moderate adjustments to a particular frequency. Finding that spot in the range where the crash cymbals sound harsh, the vocals sound siblant, or the bass muddies up the mix. With wild, fatigued eyes and cigarette butts all over the computer console, my roommate shudders as he witnesses me jump out of my chair in total elation, whooping and hollering: "Can you believe it ! ! ? I just fixed that awful-sounding crash cymbal !" or "I just squeezed two extra decibals out of my mix without clipping ! ! High fives all around !"
I'll never forget the time when my roommate said in a very concerned tone: "Why are you trying to make your mix sound louder, when all the listener has to do is turn up the volume on their stereo ? ?" I was about ready to smack him after this comment.
One time, I even managed to simulate the effects of the bbe sonic maximzer. Basically, I mixed the high, mid, and low frequencies of a song in to separate mixes. I then mixed them back together, but with a very slight delay on each frequency. Basically, this allows for each range to hit your ears at a slightly different time, giving the illusion of a cleaner, crisper sounding mix. I didn't even know what a sonic maximizer was at the time.
Total processing time (for just this effect): about 5 hours on a slow processor.
Now, I have some guys trying to tell me that mastering on my PC isn't really mastering . . . and now I even have another guy trying to tell me that I don't know what mastering even is?
Well, apparently, I seem to be having some troubles here. I've been spending insane amounts of time doing things to my mixes, and I don't even know what you would call what I've been doing ! ! ! Apparently, it's not mastering. So if someone would kindly tell me what it is, I would be most appreciative. And so would my dog and my roommate . . . as neither of them are even able to tell the difference between my final mix and my (incorrectly-titled) "masters."
Thankyou, and I look forward to your answers and/or recommendations for good therapists.
Sincerely,
Chessrock