T
T.O.I.Y.Z.
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What is the easiest Mastering Software to use?.....I was told T-Racks was pretty good and easy to use, just wanted to see what everyone else thought!!
Nope, you're not missing a thing.I use Cubase for 'mastering' the same as with mixing. And then Nero to burn. I've not personally felt the need for separate software for mastering yet. Is there something I'm missing?
The advantageous plan, IMHO, is just to follow the old addage: Use what ever tool works best for you for the job at hand.So is there an advantage to separating your mastering and recording softwares then?
The closest I've seen to that is that Audacity works better for a few steps on the mastering side of things than Reaper. (Specifically maxing out the final mixes volume and adding fade in/outs). But neither of those is specifically a "mastering" program.
Dude, I think you just copied and pasted your post from another thread. It makes no sense here.I think the problem with this was the way I worded the question....Let me try it a different way...
Once you have all your vocals laid down, as well as the beat, the steps YOU take to begin mixing the song, as far as the ORDER.....Along with that, the question of what YOU do with the Master Volume, and the volume of each of the tracks of vocals and aspects of the beat/instrumental, and the correlation of each together.....
Obviously with the beat aspects and vox you will EQ everything by ear....The question is, when you are doing this, what do YOU do with the Master Volume and each indivual track volume OVERALL......
Another technique I saw someone do was mute all aspects of the beat.....Keep the Master Volume at "0"....Mix all the vocals (adlibs, overlays, hooks/bridges/chorus), then bounce them down to one track all together...(saw another person bounce 3 times on 3 tracks...1 for main vox, one for adlibs/overlays and the third for the hooks).....Then after that was done, un-mute the beat and mix the tracks to the beat
I guess my main point is I have seen people do things different wayz, and come out with good mixes, but I am trying to figure out which way is best, or if there is a "right way" or not for mixing a song
If you want mastering software, try CD Architect or Wavelab if you want to master a CD. If you just want to publish individual cuts, any of the editors like Sound Forge or Cubase will do.
Nothing really wrong with that. That's just what I mean about use the tool that works for you. I was saying that you could have done it all in one swoop with CDA or WL, whereas in Cubase you can't do it all, you had to move on to Nero for part of it.I mastered a whole CD in Cubase because the software is pretty intuitive to me. Threw all the tunes onto individual tracks on the grid spaced in the order I wanted them, processed them individually, matched up the volumes of each track and exported the whole CD to one big wav file. Then I threw that into nero and stuck in indexes for each track. It just seemed the most sensible way of doing things for me.
Yes, it does.That takes time
Peak seems to work better at nearly everything (and because its a mac app it supports AU plug ins as well as VST... if only it did RTAS as well!)
-FKarma