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Mastering: What It Is And Why You Shouldn't Do It In Your Garage
by Ron Boustead Let me admit that I am completely biased when it comes to the importance of having your project professionally mastered. This is how I've made my living for the past fifteen years. In my view there are three equally crucial aspects to professional mastering; the room itself, the gear in the room, and the engineer. Compromise on any of these and your project suffers. Let me try and break down this whole mastering voodoo, then I'll give you some tips on how to prepare for and get the most from your mastering session. THE ROOM THE GEAR THE GUY TURNING THE KNOBS Every day, all day, mastering engineers do the same thing. They evaluate the mixes, determine the necessary processing, edit and assemble, level adjust, put the songs in the proper sequence, tweak the spacing; and by the end of the day, produce a master recording ready for duplication. Mastering engineers have a deep working knowledge of the marketplace; how various styles should sound, how loud is loud enough, how the vocal is laying in the mix, how will it sound on the radio. Objectivity. As an artist, producer or mixing engineer, you've lived with your project from the beginning, maybe a year or more. The mastering engineer brings a fresh perspective, and can compare what's coming off your tapes with comparable commercial releases. Mastering engineers make it their business to learn special skills and secrets to help your music leap out of the radio, and believe me; it's trickier than squashing the life out of it with massive amounts of compression. There's peace of mind that comes with using the right guy for the job. You know it will be right the first time, and you'll still be able to listen to it 5 years from now. COST HOW TO PREPARE FOR AND GET THE MOST FROM MASTERING Choose a mastering engineer based on their body of work, reliable references and reputation in the community. Get him/her on the phone ahead of time. Make sure you're on the same page. Choose your mixes ahead of time. If you come in with 17 versions of each song, you're wasting precious time. Decide on your sequence before the mastering session. The clock is running and there are better things for the mastering guy to be concentrating on. Label and organize your tapes. DO NOT compile all your mixes to one DAT or CD. You want to work from the most original sources. Do not over-process your two-track mixes before mastering. Leave the mastering engineer room to do his thing with the best tools for the job. If you're attending the session, try not to stay up all night mixing the night before. Make notes ahead of time about any problems, concerns, or special treatment required, especially if you're sending in your project without attending. Don't show up with a six-pack, your girlfriend, and your posse. It's not a party. Anything that distracts the engineer from making your record sound great is counter-productive. Contact your duplication facility before the session and find out the optimal format of master you can provide them. Give yourself the luxury of one final listen-through to your finished master, ideally a day or two after the mastering session in a listening environment you're comfortable with. Make sure you love it before you commit to duplication. Whether you've just been signed by Clive Davis, you're making a CD to sell on mp3.com, or composing underscore for a Sundance Film Festival entry; you'll be more competitive, more satisfied and more relaxed if you let a mastering pro finish the job. Ron Boustead is a singer/songwriter/taxi member and mastering engineer at legendary Precision Mastering in Hollywood, CA, and can be reached at 323-464-1008 or www.precisionmastering.com.
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