G
Goss-stick
New member
I'm a newbie when it comes to mastering and would like to know whats a good program to start using?
It depends on what you mean by mastering. If you're using the traditional definition of prepping your songs to work together in an album and prepping them for their final duplication medium, I recommend the Sound Forge/CD Architect bundle from Sony.
If you mean the newfangled newbie Internet definition of mastering as meaning making a not-so-good-sounding mix sound good, then whatever your favorite tools (EQs, compressors, etc.) that you use for the mixing phase will work just as well for modifying the 2-mix.
G.
Oops, sorry, my oversight. I only do Wintel and I forget about the Apple folks sometimes. My bad. No, the Sony stuff is Widows only last time I looked. For Cupertino CPU cooks, I'd bow to Massive's advice above.Sound forge/cd architech bundle from sony? Do they have that on Mac?
I understand WaveLab is being ported to Mac soon also.
WaveEditor for the Mac. Freakishly full-featured (up to and including DDP export *and import*), freakishly inexpensive (although some of us paid "full price" for it back when it was newer).
Bias Peak, Sonic Solutions PMCD... I understand WaveLab is being ported to Mac soon also.
Waveditor it is then!! Thx folks
You'll probably need these video's to help get you going:
http://vimeo.com/4855732
It's not the easiest program to get around.
Just get T-RackS 3. It's brilliant. Easy to use and gives you nice warm analog sounds.
Why do you ask: what is it that makes you ask if there may or may not be a good point to it?Is there a good point of driving a mixdown from a DAW through stereo mic preamp?
Why do you ask: what is it that makes you ask if there may or may not be a good point to it?
G.