Hey guys,
I've recorded a video-walkthrough of a mastering project I recently undertook for a record label. I've also included my 7 step process I use to master pretty much any track. Hope it helps!
Here's a link to the vid (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HVvM3o3h-2Y) which pretty much goes through the following steps:
(In the video, I’m mastering a house track (“Franky Wah – To the Floor”, forthcoming on Applique Music), but the fundamentals can be applied to ANY genre of EDM):
Firstly, 3 things to consider:
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You'll get the maximum benefit from the video with good quality monitors or headphones.
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Nothing can substitute a great mix BEFORE the mastering stage.
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Every track you master requires different treatment, but the mastering chain is usually similar. See below:
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THE MASTERING CHAIN:
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Set-up – Load the high quality, stereo .WAV or .AIFF file of your song to be mastered into a track in your DAW. Load in a comparison (or "ghost song") into a second track, of the same genre, with similar musical elements, that sounds how you want your finished master to sound. Match the levels with a VU metre so they sound of similar loudness (I use the Klanghelm VUMT metre), and bump it around 0 with a -18DB calibration. Also, add a spectrum analyser onto each track so you can compare frequencies (SPAN by Voxengo is free). Reference your ghost track every step of the way. Add the following plugins ON YOUR PRE-MASTER TRACK – NOT THE MASTER BUSS!! If you do, they will affect the ghost track, too, which makes it completely useless for reference.
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Reductive EQ – Take out the unnecessary frequencies, especially in the sub bass areas. Mid-side EQ is especially useful for taking out bass on the side channels. Depending on the quality of your mix, you might need some high Q value, surgical reduction on certain frequencies. Reference the spectrum analysers between the two tracks, but don't be TOO fussy about matching them...just broad strokes as each track is different.
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Additive EQ – Sweeten the top end (IF REQUIRED) with a gentle high shelf curve. You might do this before compression or after. Reference the spectrum analysers between the two tracks. You might apply a very steep roll-off curve nearing 20kHz to get rid of some unnecessary very high frequencies.
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Compression – Glue, multiband or parallel, depending on what's needed.
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Stereo widening – Add width if and where required (usually more in the mid to top end...never below 130Hz. Use a vector scope and correlation metre. Less important to match the ghost track here.
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Harmonic Excitement – Adds some extra energy and excitement if required.
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Loudness. A couple of limiters in series, doing less work than one pushed to the max can render better, less distorted results. Reference the RMS levers (perceived loudness) of the ghost track using a K-12 metre (Nice work, Bob Katz!), and try and get similar with yours. Notch the final output to be just below 0dB (e.g. -0.1dB) to allow for artefacts when converting to MP3 and the like.
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Hope this helps! If you have any questions, drop them in the comments below and I’ll do my best to answer.
Cheers, Will
Submitted March 08, 2018 at 03:45PM by willdarling https://www.reddit.com/r/edmproduction/comments/82zvbm/how_to_master_a_song_in_7_steps/?utm_source=ifttt