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What sort of levels (peak and avg) do you mastering guys wanna see on mixes you receive? Where do you try and end up? At the end of the day, what's the standard VU measurement and are all the peaks at 0dbfs now?

Thanks in advance

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Thomas W. Bethel Fri, 04/09/2004 - 05:56

From a mastering engineer's standpoint I need some room to work so if you would aim for peaks about -4 dBFS I would be happy. If someone brings me mixes that are peaked at zero then I have to take them down a few dBs so I can do some EQ and compression on them and why add a stage of numerical calculations to the mix before you start to work on it. Just my thoughts

Michael Fossenkemper Fri, 04/09/2004 - 16:29

I get stuff at all different kinds of levels. If your dealing with 24 bit files, then you have plenty of resolution headroom. you don't have to cram every last bit out. If it's an analog mix, then you don't want it too low or too hot. all depends on what your alignment is. there are so many variables involved that it's impossible for me to tell you what your peak to ave level should be. basically if it sounds good, your not clipping, and your meters are moving around -3 or -4 dbfs, your in good shape. where I end up after i'm done completely depends on the music. You don't want a string quartet slamming the meters and you don't want a punk band low. When your mixing, don't try to make it as loud as a mastered record. Use you volume knob to compare.

Masteringhouse Wed, 04/14/2004 - 08:47

blackbox wrote: What sort of levels (peak and avg) do you mastering guys wanna see on mixes you receive? Where do you try and end up? At the end of the day, what's the standard VU measurement and are all the peaks at 0dbfs now?

Thanks in advance

It's going to depend on the type of material. Obviously an acoustic song should be lower in average level than a thrash metal song.

For the average "pop" song most finished product (IMHO) is around -10 Dbfs RMS. So I would shoot below this. With peak levels it's best not to hit 0 to help ensure that the audio hasn't been clipped, but it's not a crime if it does for 3 consecutive samples or less.