M
Mike Freze
New member
Hi, everyone! Thanks for all your help in the past.
Hey, I'm beginning to understand more about things as I go along. Now I have a question about mixing individual songs down to export as a single audio (stereo) file (wav format) vs. the final mastering of a full CD album full of songs to be copied to a CD.
No problem with one song full of 12 tracks to be mixed down to one final track that can be exported to your hard drive as a wav file. After all the tweaking is done, it's simple to do.
My problem is with mastering those same songs for a full (say, 12 song) CD. How do you do that? If you have mixed down 12 separate songs and exported them to your hard drive as 12 separate wav files, do you have to import all 12 songs back into Cubase to do the final mastering? If so, do you literally import every song on separate, individual blank audio tracks to do this? That would mean I have 12 premixed songs on 12 audio tracks to work with all of them together at the same time for mastering: volume levels, sequencing, EQ's, etc. Is any home computer capable of handling that massive amount of memory required to work on 12 completed songs simultaneously for mastering?
OK, the other question. However I'm supposed to do this, what about saving and then exporting my mastered songs as wav files back to my hard drive? Do you have to re-mix these songs all over again as one gigantic wav file (that includes all 12 songs, recorded one at a time, all on one file) to get it to save to your hard drive as a finakl product for CD copying later?
I'm confused on how to do this. Obviously when you call up a CD of a famous band on your hard drive, you can see that each song is separated as separate tracks (or files) on the CD. That way, you can play what you want or copy only one song to somewhere else if you want to.
So when you finishing mastering all 12 songs in your recording program (like Cubase), how do you export the final version for all songs to your hard drive as individual songs to burn to a CD later?
Sequencing is a big issue: if that means ordering songs the way you want to appear on a CD (and getting what you want for specific silent periods after the end and the beginning of each song), how can you do this if you export each finished song one at a time as separate files on your hard drive?
Again, there's no problem with working one ONE song in Cubase (say, with 10 tracks), mixing all the tracks together to get your sounf, then exporting a single, sterio file to your hard drive as a single wav file. But how can you tweak all complete 12 songs in a recording program at the SAME TIME whn you master them down and THEN export them as separate songs that still maintain the sequencing and silent parts between songs for your CD?
Mike Freze
Hey, I'm beginning to understand more about things as I go along. Now I have a question about mixing individual songs down to export as a single audio (stereo) file (wav format) vs. the final mastering of a full CD album full of songs to be copied to a CD.
No problem with one song full of 12 tracks to be mixed down to one final track that can be exported to your hard drive as a wav file. After all the tweaking is done, it's simple to do.
My problem is with mastering those same songs for a full (say, 12 song) CD. How do you do that? If you have mixed down 12 separate songs and exported them to your hard drive as 12 separate wav files, do you have to import all 12 songs back into Cubase to do the final mastering? If so, do you literally import every song on separate, individual blank audio tracks to do this? That would mean I have 12 premixed songs on 12 audio tracks to work with all of them together at the same time for mastering: volume levels, sequencing, EQ's, etc. Is any home computer capable of handling that massive amount of memory required to work on 12 completed songs simultaneously for mastering?
OK, the other question. However I'm supposed to do this, what about saving and then exporting my mastered songs as wav files back to my hard drive? Do you have to re-mix these songs all over again as one gigantic wav file (that includes all 12 songs, recorded one at a time, all on one file) to get it to save to your hard drive as a finakl product for CD copying later?
I'm confused on how to do this. Obviously when you call up a CD of a famous band on your hard drive, you can see that each song is separated as separate tracks (or files) on the CD. That way, you can play what you want or copy only one song to somewhere else if you want to.
So when you finishing mastering all 12 songs in your recording program (like Cubase), how do you export the final version for all songs to your hard drive as individual songs to burn to a CD later?
Sequencing is a big issue: if that means ordering songs the way you want to appear on a CD (and getting what you want for specific silent periods after the end and the beginning of each song), how can you do this if you export each finished song one at a time as separate files on your hard drive?
Again, there's no problem with working one ONE song in Cubase (say, with 10 tracks), mixing all the tracks together to get your sounf, then exporting a single, sterio file to your hard drive as a single wav file. But how can you tweak all complete 12 songs in a recording program at the SAME TIME whn you master them down and THEN export them as separate songs that still maintain the sequencing and silent parts between songs for your CD?
Mike Freze