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Hey guys... I'm completely new to mastering and basically I will openly admit that I have come to leech off your knowledge..

The objective of this thread as far as I am concerned is to establish the following -

A) What are the primary objectives of mastering in clear detail and what are the necessary BRIEF steps to achieve them. (I am sure I will learn the methods from you in time.)

B) I just got wavelab and I am wondering where the hell I start with mastering.

C) If there is a sort of "set plan" then what order should I aI'm to do things ... Are things completely different from in the mixing world with FX chains ?

If anyone could shed any light on this for me then I would be a very happy boy.

I am quite literally... Clueless.

Cheers, best wishes to all !

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JohnTodd Mon, 12/13/2010 - 04:12

You can do mastering in 3 ez steps in Wavelab! (ducks chairs thrown at me)

1. Normalize panning

2. Normalize level to -1db

3. Edit the beginning and end to put in a quick fade.

Listen and enjoy! Dont forget to save.

That'll get you started. Real mastering takes as many years to learn as playing an instrument very well.

Please don't squash the dynamics out of everything! Real music breathes!

Voiceofallanger Mon, 12/13/2010 - 04:15

Taken what both of you said on board. I'll start with what you said John and I'll get right onto those books etc.

Thank you both for the information.

Usually I youtube things like this but not with mixing and mastering.. I find that there are a lot of people on youtube who really have no idea what they are doing and I would prefer to get the information from a specialist forum like this.

Thanks again!

Massive Mastering Tue, 12/14/2010 - 14:23

A) To create a cohesive and compliant (to the media) production master from which all copies will be made.

Steps?

1. Listen objectively (this is the part where people typically mess up) --
2. Realistically establish a "mental visualization" of the potential of the recording --
3. Do what the recording needs to get from point "A" to point "B" --
3b. This needs to be done individually and holistically at the same time --

B) If you don't know, I don't know what to tell you (other than perhaps reading those books).

C) Listening skills and knowing your tools is everything. The chain will likely be different from mix to mix - There are no presets, there are no starting points (except "Listen").

Thomas W. Bethel Tue, 12/14/2010 - 16:11

JohnTodd, post: 358865 wrote: You can do mastering in 3 ez steps in Wavelab! (ducks chairs thrown at me)

1. Normalize panning

2. Normalize level to -1db

3. Edit the beginning and end to put in a quick fade.

Listen and enjoy! Dont forget to save.

That'll get you started. Real mastering takes as many years to learn as playing an instrument very well.

Please don't squash the dynamics out of everything! Real music breathes!

I hope this reply was done somewhat "tongue in cheek????"

Thomas W. Bethel Tue, 12/14/2010 - 16:13

Massive Mastering, post: 358967 wrote: A) To create a cohesive and compliant (to the media) production master from which all copies will be made.

Steps?

1. Listen objectively (this is the part where people typically mess up) --
2. Realistically establish a "mental visualization" of the potential of the recording --
3. Do what the recording needs to get from point "A" to point "B" --
3b. This needs to be done individually and holistically at the same time --

B) If you don't know, I don't know what to tell you (other than perhaps reading those books).

C) Listening skills and knowing your tools is everything. The chain will likely be different from mix to mix - There are no presets, there are no starting points (except "Listen").

Well put. I would only add...

Having the proper space, acoustics, equipment and experience doing lots of mastering really helps....It is, as others have said, not something you learn overnight and there are no tricks or shortcuts to doing a good job,

anonymous Tue, 12/14/2010 - 16:34

Hello,

Mastering you'll want to do with fresh ears for the music needing work.

You just need to get in there and do it, over and over till you start hearing what you are doing.
It's best to have reference cd's of what sound you want, and constantly compare.
Biggest things would be, but only as neccesary,
Equalization, Compression, Stereo imaging and a Brick wall Limiter.
You are really trying to sweetin' up the songs, and make the album sound fluid. It will take lots of time and practice but start small and keep checking the forums, good luck

Keep It Trill
LOS

Voiceofallanger Wed, 12/15/2010 - 00:44

This is all very helpful as I currently don't have the first clue..

However.. I am extremely pleased to hear that it is more listening than a set plan because I have really good ears even though I have no mastering experience.. I guess it's time to get a few demo tracks done and have a play about for an exercise!

Thank you everyone!