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| | #1 |
| Gear Head Join Date: Jan 2008 Location: London
Posts: 60
| Transition, London - Experiences? I'm getting my first release on vinyl in the coming month mastered. My label head got his release done at Transition in London. Who seem to be putting out a lot of similar and (to my inexperienced ears) nice sounding masters of a similar vain i.e. Club/Electronica/Bassy Dubstep/Digital Mystiks etc. Has anybody experiences here? I know you all seem to rate Nils handiwork at the Exchange for club music but I'm not sure we'd be able to afford the Exchange/Heathmans. Or is Transition not much cheaper?! For example, roughly how much do all these studios charge for say, a 2-track 5 min each side 12" master? Cheers. |
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| | #2 |
| Gear addict Join Date: Jan 2003 Location: Brooklyn
Posts: 445
| Jason posts here under "Fat Larry". A mutual acquaintance who I respect speaks very highly of him.
__________________ Paul Gold www.saltmastering.com most mixes that sound good usually look like a sort of puffy cloud - j ward |
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| | #3 | |
| Lives for gear Join Date: Mar 2003 Location: UK
Posts: 660
| Quote:
If you have a mix that’s nicely balanced, without any properties that create headaches for the ME (firstly: your sonic expectations - secondly: concerns such as excessive HF – cutterheads don’t like that!), you might get just as good a cut in a one-hour ‘cookie cutter’ session, and an extended afternoon session could yield minor improvement, but for much more outlay. However, on the other hand…if you really need some issues sorted out, a cookie cutter would be a compromise (isn’t everything in life?) Nilz has cut a few projects for me over the years. You have 3 ways to do it: a) Book an hour – aka ‘cookie cutter’ - and do the best you can in that hour. If your 2 tracks are well-balanced and don't need much corrective work, this will be ok. As with mixing and tracking, commitment is an issue... As you probably know, having the option of doing a million overdubs without loss hasn’t given us better music than 30 years ago! If it sounds good after 20 minutes - it sounds good - and another 2 hours may not yield dividends. b) Book half a day / day and experiment with a multitude of techniques to optimise the recording. You cut plenty of test lacquers and generally umm and ahh until you're happy - not cheap and a rare booking in today's day and age. c) Book an unattended cut. This can go either way (I've yet to 'back' an Exchange cut, but we're talking about all firms here). If the project is balanced and generally ok - I find unattended cuts aren't a bad thing, as the ME doesn't have to put up with me asking questions about cutter amp topologies (labels cottoned onto this and started getting things cut behind my back...). With someone as good as Nilz, leaving him to his own devices usually yields dividends as - I assume - he fits it in when he can, and has more time to think of chain / processing (he could check it out in the morning, chew over what needs doing, and cut it later). Mandy Parnell (ex-Exchange) has a great client portfolio and she doesn't charge Exchange rates btw - put her into Google for a link. Anything between £120 and £250 p/hour is normal, with lacquers / post-processing copies etc costing extra. My apologies for the long post - this isn't an easy one to answer. Justin edit - before I forget - bear in mind that, even if major corrective work is needed, you'll be better off with the ME using his or her Massenburg or Sontec for it. Whatever you do, don't try and save time by 'pre-mastering' in a non-mastering studio. Paul - I'm a bit concerned about your STDs - have you tried antibiotics?
__________________ Please note that I am no longer a consultant for Phoenix Audio UK and I have not contacted the company since 2006. As such, I am unable to assist with any Phoenix-related queries whatsoever. Thank you. | |
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| | #4 |
| Gear addict Join Date: Jan 2003 Location: Brooklyn
Posts: 445
| No need, I don't have any. I'm not a slut, just a voyeur.
__________________ Paul Gold www.saltmastering.com most mixes that sound good usually look like a sort of puffy cloud - j ward |
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| | #5 | ||
| Gear Head Join Date: Jan 2008 Location: London
Posts: 60
| Quote:
Quote:
But I've also done my own cd master which involved Kjaerhus plugin compression and limiting. But also more importantly for me, the tracks were run through a small bit of tube effect and stereo enhancement provided by my Focusrite Platinum Penta. Is it okay/standard practice to bring this cd as something of a reference? should I bring 2 sets of files, one set untouched and one set tube/stereo processed by the Penta (but of course not comped/limited/eq'd)? | ||
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| | #6 | |
| Gear nut Join Date: Aug 2005 Location: London
Posts: 87
| Chopstick, I tried to pm you but could not,So drop me an email or give me a call, All of our details are on our website. Transition Mastering Studios Quote:
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| | #7 | |
| Lives for gear Join Date: Mar 2003 Location: UK
Posts: 660
| Quote:
One suggestion would be to play the ME your processed version as a guide, and ask them to emulate it in their room, with their gear, from the raw master. A mastering suite should have exceptional acoustics and outboard - that's the whole point of a mastering facility, and it's why you pay them! Good luck and congrats on your first vinyl release Justin edit - if you want value for money, a tip is to make sure (most MEs will do this as standard) to get a high-res CD from the chain of the master as it hits the cutterhead. This gives you 2 things: firstly a reference for what went to the lacquer (invaluable if you have any issues); secondly, it potentially gives you a CD master, made from the MEs expensive outboard. Don't tell the ME I told you to get 2 masters for one!
__________________ Please note that I am no longer a consultant for Phoenix Audio UK and I have not contacted the company since 2006. As such, I am unable to assist with any Phoenix-related queries whatsoever. Thank you. | |
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| | #8 | ||
| Gear Head Join Date: Jan 2008 Location: London
Posts: 60
| Cheers Jason, that about swings it for me. I think I'll be into you as soon as my label head sorts out his Uk distribution plan (it's an Irish based label) which will hopefully be before the month is out. He just needs to know the budget etc. Quote:
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John. | ||
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