
Massive Master
www.massivemastering.com
I've only once (that I can recall) had a mix come in *too* quiet.
Not sure what happened - The mix engineer was a little surprised also. We loaded the file in and you could *almost* hear something that sounded like background noise.
So for fun, I normalized the file...
There it was - The entire mix printed at -48dBFS for some odd reason (still haven't figured out why, but I wasn't there for the mix).
And of course, it sounded just fine. That mix PEAKED at -48dBFS -- And it sounded just fine, even from just normalizing it.
Obviously, the engineer insisted on correcting the problem, which was fine with me. But the short of it is that you really do have SO much more headroom than you'd ever need, it's a shame to not take advantage of it.
When digital was in its advent, we were all drooling about how much headroom there was - Even in 16-bit. Now with 24-bit the standard for tracking & mixing while calculations are being thrown in 32 bit or higher - I can't believe that so many people insist on using up all of that glorious headroom at every possible instance... Depressing to say the least... It doesn't make the final product louder (it actually squelches it because of all the added distortion during hot tracking), it doesn't improve the signal-to-noise (it makes it much worse) -- It certainly doesn't improve the sound quality (again, the first things to go are the clarity and focus).
Wow... It really *is* depressing...
Not sure what happened - The mix engineer was a little surprised also. We loaded the file in and you could *almost* hear something that sounded like background noise.
So for fun, I normalized the file...
There it was - The entire mix printed at -48dBFS for some odd reason (still haven't figured out why, but I wasn't there for the mix).
And of course, it sounded just fine. That mix PEAKED at -48dBFS -- And it sounded just fine, even from just normalizing it.
Obviously, the engineer insisted on correcting the problem, which was fine with me. But the short of it is that you really do have SO much more headroom than you'd ever need, it's a shame to not take advantage of it.
When digital was in its advent, we were all drooling about how much headroom there was - Even in 16-bit. Now with 24-bit the standard for tracking & mixing while calculations are being thrown in 32 bit or higher - I can't believe that so many people insist on using up all of that glorious headroom at every possible instance... Depressing to say the least... It doesn't make the final product louder (it actually squelches it because of all the added distortion during hot tracking), it doesn't improve the signal-to-noise (it makes it much worse) -- It certainly doesn't improve the sound quality (again, the first things to go are the clarity and focus).
Wow... It really *is* depressing...
