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hello group,
how does your treatment differ when you are mastering a track for radio and/or tv ? Do you do that at all these days ?
I usually push the bass-area up a bit (frequency-wise) including a high-pass (around 50hz). for radio I also push the midrange for approx. 1 db up.
does that make any sense for anybody ?

any suggestions apprechiated, best regards-

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Comments

anonymous Thu, 10/14/2004 - 03:22

a good mix will sound decent anywhere, but i'd say there's a difference between radio and tv..tv limiters leave your mix alone, unless you hit their treshhold, then they sound awfull, radio limits/compresses/multiband compresses/expands -and what not -your mix, untill no dynamics are present..I guess your mix has to be somewhat adjusted to that..

anonymous Fri, 10/15/2004 - 15:09

wich leaves me with a little question:
how do you masteringguys check radio compatibility?
is it experience, do you have an optimod, do you you have an optimod emulation, or
c- something else..
thanks a bunch!
huub

some radio station really go way too far with the optimod i think..
there are radio stations that actually give me a headache..

joe lambert Fri, 10/15/2004 - 16:27

The point of mastering for me is to work with the thought the song will be played on radio, tv, and whatever else. I take that all into concideration when working. Every once in a blue moon I will have a record that is very dynamic and we may do a pass with a little more comp for the radio/TV vers. But this is very rare.
Before with cassette and vinyl you had to work within certain parameters. That's no longer the case with CD, DVD, SACD.