I used to get upset when I had a bunch of songs that their levels were all over the place. My wife would want to hand cd's out to anybody she thought had juice in the industry and I say, "No! These are not finished!" She'd say, "They just need to be mastered, but I want people to hear what we've been doing."
There was an article I read not too long ago (somewhere)…and the author was talking about how it’s important not to get too hung up about polishing every aspect of your recordings, and that if you spend 20 minutes listening to radio play, even with everything getting pumped up in level, you will still notice that every song has a different EQ, quality and flavor. IOW…it’s OK if your stuff has its own flavor.
That said, I do spend a lot of time (probably too much) trying to squeeze the best sound I can get out of my own recordings, but I also look at my efforts as a great learning experience…finding out just how far I can go with what I have at hand in my studio.
I’ve been experimenting with different mastering approaches, and spent a few months auditioning different setups…trying out different levels, EQ, etc..etc…and actually this weekend I finally settled on the best "mastering" approach for my studio rig and my music. And I put qoutations around mastering becuase I don't want to imply that I am a mastering engineer with a proper mastering studio, but I also do think that sometimes, we can make better decisions for our own music...assuming we have a bit of knowledge and somewhat decent equipment to apply it with.
I don’t mean to insult any of the mastering engineers, but I tried sending out a couple of things to commercial mastering houses for test purposes awhile back, and while they didn’t come back sounding “bad”…they did come back sounding rather predictable and typical of how many people master these days.
The music was quite louder than what I sent out, and had a lot of punch…but it was also somewhat edgy, and the low end was doing something weird…it seemed a bit disconnected from everything else. When I pulled the mastered files into my DAW...it was quickly obvious what was going on...with all the peaks flat-topped to the max!
Mind you…apart from the very obvious loudness increase, the other issues were more subtle, though still noticable, and to my ears they were pretty annoying compared to my original mixes which I already had lived with for quite awhile.
Could the songs have been left alone mastered that way and would they “fit in” with a lot of other stuff mastered these days…absolutely!
However, I decided to see if I could do better, so like I said, I spent some time trying out different approaches, and I think I found a good working SOP (for my music, in my studio).
Basically…since I tend to only use a DAW for cut/paste editing…and then mix back out through an analog console using outboard processing, I decided to take my stereo mix and mastering…back to tape, along with a good EQ across deck's stereo output which let me fine-tune what I had coming back off the tape…and then I recorded that tape output back into the DAW at 24/88.2.
Once back in the DAW, the rather few rogue peaks that got by the tape deck, I then manually adjust on a peak-by-peak basis.
I use no limiting anywhere.
I’m able to raise the final level quite substantially, while also shaping the global EQ to bring it more into the realm of a decent commercial product. I think the final results have a better smoothness and cohesive quality, while still maintaining dynamics, even with the huge level boost.
It reminds me of good vinyl recordings…when we use to just crank up the volume on the old Hi-Fi stereo system!
I’m sure other people could get other results, using other equipment and other approaches, but then we are back to what I mentioned above, about not worrying if my music doesn’t sound exactly like something else. I think any typical listener will always “adjust their ears” to whatever is coming from the radio…and when you consider that we are ensconced with Lo-Fi music all around us these days…well, there’s no need to be overly critical about your own efforts.
I should have my final album mixes posted on my website in the coming weeks (right now I just have a couple of early, pre-mastered mixes on there).
So I guess my answer is to just mix/master the way you think it should sound…and let the radio play take care of itself.
Ooooh…I guess I rambled on a bit long too…
miroslav
