C
Christoffah
New member
The song is loaded in Cubase and I'm happy with all the levels in respect to each channel, it's sounding nice and balanced. The only thing is, the whole mix is constantly peaking, which is probably unacceptable (despite the fact that when comparing to a number of professionally mastered songs, a lot of them 'peak').
I'm a complete newbie to this, but these are the ideas I've had.
1) Turn each channel down by 1 dB, and then see if it peaks. If not, do it again, etc until it doesn't peak.
2) Or, just mixdown what I have, then take the volume down together. (something gives me a feeling this is a bad method, but I want your opinion).
I've heard on this forum that Cubase is bad for mastering. Why is this? I have Sound Forge somewhere, but have never really used it. Would this be better to master my CD? If so, why?
Many many thanks.
Chris.
I'm a complete newbie to this, but these are the ideas I've had.
1) Turn each channel down by 1 dB, and then see if it peaks. If not, do it again, etc until it doesn't peak.
2) Or, just mixdown what I have, then take the volume down together. (something gives me a feeling this is a bad method, but I want your opinion).
I've heard on this forum that Cubase is bad for mastering. Why is this? I have Sound Forge somewhere, but have never really used it. Would this be better to master my CD? If so, why?
Many many thanks.
Chris.


I think you get my point. On the group track problem.You could just bring down all the tracks the same amount. There should be someway to tell just how much you are changing the level instead of eyeing.
) you have some headroom in the 'mixer and you can just bring it down at the master. But having the mix come in near zero (or less) with the master at zero is gererally a good indication that the mix is right where it should be too.
Funny, now I have slowly brought up faders in Sonar and never noticed any change in my master voloum. Maybe I just did not see 