Skip to main content

Hello, I've been recording for a couple of years, basically just teaching myself as I go along, adding better microphones to my arsenal, and upgrading my mixer to a Yamaha AW-16G.

I have only been mixing through headphones (I'm going to buy decent monitors), and have only used the mastering presets on my digital mixer.

I'm not looking for professional results - just something better than I am currently getting.

I would really appreciate any advice you can give me with regards to mastering.

For example, are there any computer programs which I can put my finished mix from my Yamaha in .wav or .mp3 format, and master it from here? Or is there something more I can do to master it from my recorder? (I'm not sure if the presets are THAT good.)

Any help would be appreciated.

PS - here are a couple of my recordings to give you an idea of the (lack of) quality I am currently getting.

Link removed

Link removed

Thank you very much in advance,

Don

Comments

anonymous Sun, 12/25/2005 - 11:22

For a great beginner's overview of mastering - along with a simple and fairly cheap plug-in that does it all - I recommend the Ozone plug.

http://www.izotope.com/products/audio/ozone/guides.html

You can download the user guide for free, and unlike most user manuals, they really go in depth with the techniques and explain the basics of mastering first, and how to use their plug-in second. They have a free demo download, too, that adds little noise pops every 10 seconds, but everthing works, so you can hear it for yourself. My only gripe with the manual is that they seem to push multi-band compression as more important in mastering than single-band compression. Other then that, they make great recommendations about general starting settings, but above all, they emphasize that it always depends from song to song. In other words, they are very humble about their one-size-fits-all presets.

This is from their website:

"If you don’t have Ozone but want to learn more about dithering or mastering, we still hope these guides will help you. Sure, we think you should use Ozone, but we learned a lot about mastering from “the online audio community”, and we want to give something back in return."

So they just have a good attitude about it.

Of course, this all-in-one plug-in is not high-end stuff, but it sounds perfect for what you need.

The plug-in includes (along with descriptions of how each tool is used):

EQ, master reverb, harmonic exciter, stereo imager, compressors, loudness maximizer.

Hope this helps.

anonymous Sun, 12/25/2005 - 11:42

Thanks for the replies so far.

About the Ozone plug-in - it looks great, but I don't have any programs on my computer to begin with.

I do all of my recording and mixing in my digital recorder.

Is there a program where I can dump my finished "mixed" song into it, and still master it from this stage?

Also, any recommendations for studio monitors (hopefully around $200 or less.)

Thanks for all of the help!

audiowkstation Sun, 12/25/2005 - 17:56

Been busy (today of all days) so this is why I did not get back to this post..and I have a few more hours to go. My number is on my web site and I am on central time. Anytime you want to speak, I can set aside some time. My email is there as well..so email me first so I can turn on the phone and you won't get the answering service.

:)

RemyRAD Sun, 12/25/2005 - 18:23

More crappy suggestions that I have suggested before for crappy mastering purposes. T-Racks standalone 2 track mastering program. The presets sound awful. Way too overblown sounding.

Use your own judgment. Very easy to abuse this mastering software. You can make things too too loud! Less is more. The distortion control adds 2nd harmonics, use very sparingly.

A lot of people think this software is substandard. I think it's great in the right hands! Too many heavy-handed engineers out there.

Remy DON'T TOUCH ME THERE Ann David

x

User login