
Massive Master
www.massivemastering.com
You're going to take a line level signal down to a mic level signal and use a preamp to bring it back up to a line level signal --- for "signal processing" of what sort exactly?
You're going to take a line level signal down to a mic level signal and use a preamp to bring it back up to a line level signal --- for "signal processing" of what sort exactly?
And I'd add that not all preamps are created the same. Just saying you're running a signal "though a preamp" is like just saying "I'm racing my car". That statement means two rather different things depending upon whether your car is A Chevy Corvette or Nissan Leaf. If your preamp is closer to a Leaf than a Vette, then the advantages of running a master through it are questionable.
G.
If that's what the mix is telling you to do, go for it. If you're doing it "just to use outboard gear" then by all means, don't do it.
My personal opinion ( and that's all it is) is that you're jumping the gun in your concerns a bit.
That's all fine gear you mentioned, as I'm sure you know. But I think worrying now about whether you should or could use them as part of your mastering process is fruitless until you actually get to that point.
You may find that just the additions of that gear to your tracking stage is enough. That you don't want/need to use them as a mastering effect because they are already doing their jobs in the way they are intended to early on in the process. But that would still make them just as worthwhile.
Or you may find, perhaps, that the quality of input chain is not your problem, rather that it may be something else such as your mic selection or usage, or your room acoustics or your mix monitors and your mix station setup, or aliens beaming theta rays from space into your house and messing everything up on you. In such cases, the top shelf preamps may help, but won't actually completely solve your problems, even if you do stick them on both the front end and the back end.
The bottom line is, IMHO, if you think a "gold channel" is indeed the answer, it will be the answer for what it is, a golden input/recording channel. Maybe such a recording chain sometimes it might be gravy on the potatoes to use occasionally in mastering as well, but I wouldn't consider that as a make/break reason for getting one or as a make/break solution for your recordings.
G.
Anything that can be used in tracking or mixing can be used in mastering. And vice versa. An EQ is an EQ, a compressor is a compressor, a limiter is a limiter, noise reduction is noise reduction, a reverb is a reverb, all regardless of when and wherever you use them. And therefore, there's nothing that says you cannot use the processors in channel strips in mastering.You got a point...I'm seeing the picture upside down...
anyway I'm not saying that I have some issues with my mixes that i want to get rid off in the mastering process I just want to raise the volume and add something unussual in a musical way from that preamp to the master (if something like thatwill happen at all).
I know its kind a unusual but I have to ask... Lets say I skip the preamp...could I use the comp and the eq from two channel strips? as a some sort of mastering tool?