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| | #1 |
| Registered User Joined: Apr 2006
Posts: 102
Thread Starter | "Perfect mix doesn't need mastering." but I thought...
Once again I was glad to read in the Mastering Audio text that a "perfect mix doesnt need mastering." So that got me to thinking if the mastering engineer is also the mixing engineer thats good right? Well but more to the point. What do mastering engineers usually get then only a few "stems?" As I understand it stems contain one or two bounced tracks(submix). I was under the impression that the mix engineer or producer would send all the tracks separate? Is this not the case most of the time? .thanks |
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| | #2 |
| Lives for gear Joined: Dec 2005
Posts: 1,008
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That perfect mix happens 1 out of 1000 mixes you will do. If that!!! But I think every mix needs mastering. Not some ITB cheap mastering that you can do yourself but real mastering. Big mastering places do majic!!!! And yes a stem is a subgroup of drums, guitars, others, vox.... the usual. But idealy they are brought up in mastering at unity gain! They really are not there to be mixed.... but the option is there! But what do I know?? |
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| | #3 |
| Lives for gear |
Well technically, the "perfect mix" would require *no processing* during mastering. It would still require being assembled with the other mixes into a compliant production master (which is where the name of the process came from in the first place).
__________________ John Scrip - Massive Mastering, LLC - www.massivemastering.com Spoon-feed a newb some answer and he'll mix for a day - Get him to *think* about it and figure it out for himself and he'll mix for a lifetime --- JS |
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| | #4 |
| Lives for gear Joined: Feb 2005 Location: Amsterdam
Posts: 1,735
Verified Member |
If you're mixing ITB you can even bring your computer to the mastering session to master directly from your mix - this has some pitfalls but can also deliver great reults and can even be a life saver (because of the possibility to fix problems "at source").
__________________ www.amsterdammastering.com |
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| | #5 | |
| Gear addict Joined: Dec 2002 Location: NY
Posts: 346
| Quote:
mastering engineers do not always make good mixers - a whole different set of skills are required. a ME learns to polish stereo program material, NOT to balance 24-96 tracks. whoa. a guy who is GREAT at shining up a stereo 2-track and doing all possible to get the final record to sound great is NOT defacto the guy to mix multitrack recordings. different animal entirely. same reason why in most cases the mix engineer should NOT master himself. the MEs spend ALL DAY doing just one thing - getting stereo 2-tracks to sound best. regards, rlnyc. | |
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| | #6 | |
| Registered User Joined: Apr 2006
Posts: 102
Thread Starter | Quote:
Well now that you mention it, I guess this is in the same league as you cant master audio if you dont have really really expensive monitors...I love the thought of that......(sarcasm)...... Here is a link I found on the subject, glad to see nothing is set in stone. OR is it? I joke No I dont....what? http://recforums.prosoundweb.com/index.php/t/11209/0/ | |
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| | #7 | |||
| Lives for gear | Quote:
Quote:
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There might be quite a few people out there who want to break with this formula, but I don't think it's a very good idea. Probably not a good way to gain a reputation as a mix engineer if you attempt to master the mixes that you do, and for sure it's not a good idea to try to start a mastering business if you don't have the experience, equipment or monitoring to do so since guaranteed that without these things you will botch some people's stuff and word will get around. | |||
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| | #8 |
| Gear Guru Joined: Dec 2002 Location: Columbus, Ohio
Posts: 12,407
Verified Member |
Mixing is one totally unique step. Mastering is another specialized act. Even assuming a great room with gear for both and a great engineer of discipline, it's NEARLY impossible to nail a mix as well as mixing and mastering it... and even then the levels and slight EQ tilt may not suit the record so some mastering is always required for assembly.
__________________ Brian Lucey Magic Garden Mastering Dr. John, The Shins, The Black Keys, OAR, David Lynch, Sami Yusuf, moe., Sigur Ros Spiral Groove Studio One - mixing monitors |
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| | #9 | |
| Lives for gear | Quote:
It seems that a lot of people expect the ME to work miracles and/or act purely as a sonic crusher.
__________________ 'Ever since the Supreme Court overturned the Snare Act, it has been legal to use any mic you like on snare.' - joeq http://www.doorknocker.ch/ | |
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| | #10 | |
| Registered User Joined: Apr 2006
Posts: 102
Thread Starter | Quote:
Gigante, I appreciate your comments. I guess im coming from an idealistic viewpoint. I like producing my mixes with the master in mind. And since I am a DIY home studio guy, I just want to get my arms around it all. Knowing about mastering somehow feeds my mixing skills. I think I put too much stake in what other people say about this topic. One not being able to be the other, I think some might be looking at it from a professional/industry viewpoint in which the Master E has nothing to do with the mix. I m looking at it from a self taught wanting to learn it all viewpoint. I like mastering and mixing. If I have to decide on one I guess I'll have to wait and see which one chooses me. thanks for the comments | |
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| | #11 | |
| Mastering Joined: Mar 2006
Posts: 3,099
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I once read an article that made me throw up, that "mastering is all about making your record louder". No, it's not....
__________________ Bob Katz DIGITAL DOMAIN http://www.digido.com "There are two kinds of fools. One says-this is old and therefore good. The other says-this is new and therefore better." No trees were killed in the sending of this message. However a large number of electrons were terribly inconvenienced. | |
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| | #12 |
| Motown legend Joined: Jun 2002 Location: Songwriter Gulch, Nashville TN
Posts: 10,878
Verified Member |
I totally subscribe to the idea that a perfect mix doesn't need mastering. Where this gets complex is the question of context. Is it at the right level relative to the song before or the song after? Does it sound like the same singer or band? Should it? These are subtle presentation issues that involve minor tweaks that would be pointless if the song were only going to be heard alone. They still can make a significant difference in the listener's experience of an album or of a single when played next to others in the same genre. I'll repeat my mantra: Mastering is about the presentation of the mix. The mix is about the presentation of the song, the artist and the music.
__________________ Bob's room 615 562-4346 Georgetown Masters 615 254-3233 Music Industry 2.0 Interview |
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| | #13 | |
| Registered User Joined: Apr 2006
Posts: 102
Thread Starter | Quote:
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| | #14 |
| Gear Head Joined: Feb 2006 Location: London
Posts: 40
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[QUOTE=crabtwins] And since I am a DIY home studio guy, I just want to get my arms around it all. /QUOTE] Perhaps because you are asking questions on a mastering forum, you're seeking some opinions on finishing your work? That's what mastering is: objective finishing. How much it costs, and how much it brings to the music, depends on the overall budget and politics of the project. As the recording process has broken free of label-owned studios, and been distributed to home and 'project' facilities, the quality control burden has fallen more and more on the artist's own shoulders. So the importance of mastering with some objective and professional ears, the last chance in the production chain for a qc check, has risen. |
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| | #15 | |
| Lives for gear | Quote:
That's why the perfect mix wouldn't need more processing (besides stuff to get it 'loud' in the unfortunate case that the client insists on 'loud') at the mastering stage, because ideally there wouldn't be problems that the mastering engineer would have to address. However, it's tough to pull off a mix like that, especially in a room and with monitoring that might be masking problems in the mix or making you boost or cut the wrong freq's in your mix to compensate for room/monitoring problems. Also, if one is orchestrating the process from the tracking/arrangement stages, objectivity is lost. But for sure learning all about the mastering process will improve your skills in other areas, and likewise skill and experience in the other areas will give you knowledge about what works and what doesn't if you decide that mastering is what you want to do. | |
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| | #16 | |
| Lives for gear Joined: Dec 2005 Location: Orlando
Posts: 1,231
| Quote:
On the flip side, you obvioulsy wouldn't want to take it to another project studio that has its own monitoring pitfalls that you're not familiar with... that leaves you worse-off. This is not to say it's a set rule that one person cannot do both effectively... But hey, you gotta work w/in the budget, right? | |
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| | #17 |
| Lives for gear Joined: Aug 2005
Posts: 2,076
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I would not agree that mastering is not needed if the mix is right, but more that mastering is needed to be able to confirm that the mix is right. Mastering is about preparing for use, something you don't think that much about when you are mixing a song to sound great. The perfect mix is a beautiful idea and possibly a little naive as well, the mastering process is about adding a perspective on a song to optimize it for a certain type of context. That makes it a very important step in the record production process.
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| | #18 |
| Gear interested Joined: May 2006 Location: Brooklyn
Posts: 4
| "Perfect mix doesn't need mastering." but I thought...
I look at it like this; I remixed "Oye Como Va" by and for Tito Puente Jr. personally. My entire mixdown sounded perfect, so perfect, I thought it didn't need to be mastered; i.e., the highs sounded crisp, the bottom end was just perfect, etc. But when I put it up against other tracks in the same genre, I heard some notable differences; harmonics were missing. So I went back, attentuated some individual tracks and then mastered the track. When I was finished, that track got spun in clubs by myself and other DJ's, on the radio during a radio interview that a station did with Tito Puente Jr. himself, and the finished project that I mixed and mastered sounded like it came right out of a mastering facility. The point to all this is clear; a perfect mix always need some type of mastering to buff up and add polish to your master piece, and YES, mix engineers can definitely master a project especially if they specialize in a specific genre that he or she produces and/or mixes. But my advise to those of you who want to master your own projects, Don't begin mastering the moment you bounce your mixdown. Wait 2 - 3 day's so your ears freshen up, make sure you have the right tools; i.e., the right plugins, the right outboard gear (analog and digital), and always, reference from CD's that are already on the market to find out if your music is ready or not. Let me know if this information works out for you. -DJ Spinn- |
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| | #19 | |
| Gear Guru Joined: Jun 2002 Location: New York City
Posts: 14,177
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Dude this has got to be the biggest B.S. i've read yet. The only person that needs to give confirmation is the person paying for it. If they think the mix is fine than its fine. Case closed. Everyone and their mother can have their opinions on how they can make it better but bottomn line they aren't paying for it. We don't mix for each others approval, we mix to convey the idea of the creators of the song. What happens afterwards is up to them. | |
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| | #20 |
| Gear interested Joined: May 2006 Location: Brooklyn
Posts: 4
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"Dude" you know what, you're absolutley right - the only person to give confirmation is the person paying for it. But, my story, suggestions and opinions are for those people who ASK for help and/or suggestions with mixes and/or mastering - what they do in the end is totally up to them. If their project sounds hot, good, if it doesn't, still good - we don't mix for each others approval, but like I said, some people need suggestions and in the end it's totally up to them.
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| | #21 | |
| Lives for gear Joined: Mar 2006 Location: Austin, Texas
Posts: 1,960
Verified Member | Quote:
Now if the Artist or Producer, is paying the bills... ok. The Mastering session is not the time to tighten the budget... Maybe it was the caviar, champagne, limos, massages, and cartage during tracking! ; ) JT
__________________ Terra Nova Mastering Celebrating 21 years of Mastering! Using analog, digital, tape, tubes, transformers, plug-ins, hardware, etc... whatever best serves the project. | |
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| | #22 | |
| Lives for gear Joined: Aug 2005
Posts: 2,076
| Quote:
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| | #23 | |
| Gear Guru Joined: Jun 2002 Location: New York City
Posts: 14,177
| Quote:
Again that is your opinion. I mix for a living and i don't mix for Mastering engineers(even though some are good friends). I mix for the client. What he/she decides to do after with it is up to them. Its their property and they can do as they choose with it. I think people have gotten into their heads that there is this regimented way records are done. This so called protocol that everything has to be done "by the book"of the engineers union. Man if no one's gotten it yet records aren't made for us. They are made for public consumption. Records are meant to entertain people just like a movie, a broadway show, a comic book, a sports event, a mystery novel. etc. How it gets to the public doesn't really matter. Always keep in mind that we are just part of that process. We aren't the process though and i think that's where i am afraid some Engineers have gone to. | |
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| | #24 |
| Gear Guru Joined: Dec 2002 Location: Columbus, Ohio
Posts: 12,407
Verified Member |
I'm confused as to what's the disagreement between you fellas? And to me this topic is silly ... for one thing, there is no "perfect mix" only the one a client approves ... or the "best" effort of the mixer. And as to what any project "needs" ... that too is in the hands of the client/artist/producer. If we define 'need' as the minimum effort to hear the song, than a rough mix is fine. If we want the best possible product, some mastering is almost always going to happen. Is it more complicated than this? |
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| | #25 |
| Lives for gear Joined: May 2003 Location: NY
Posts: 1,142
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show me a perfect mix *after masteringtutt
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