"Hi,
Maybe some folks on this list have insites into the
following conversation between Steve and myself. I
need all the help I can get. The last three paragraphs
are a topic for which I am woefully ignorant."
Hiya. I do the occasional master for releases, and "make it louder" is an all
too common request. Whether it suits the track, the place in the album or the recording
does not matter, they just want it LOUD. It's sad, but he who pays the piper....
Yes, you have to mash the audio (as you have found), and it kills me to hear carefully
recorded tracks being brutally handled, so the idea is to do it as kindly as possible. :)
Here's some rambling about how I go about it.
First, where is all the energy in the track? What is taking up all your headroom?
Subsonics can really take up headroom, so going back to the mix and high passing any
tracks that don't need bass end can give you more space to work with. Starting at 20hz
on most tracks and work up from there.
Then, put a fast limiter across your main outputs, set it so it's fairly hammering the
track, and listen for the moments when it really ducks.
Look what's going on in the track at those points and automate/eq those parts. Much of
getting a 'loud' track is in the mixing.
Pretty much any limiter will work here. You *want* it to be offensive. :)
My chain for mastering is normally - EQ/Exciter -> Comp -> Multiband Comp->
Limiter -> Dither.
The first eq gets the general shape. Don't move on till you are happy. Try a steep
highpass at 10hz or whatever here too. Creep it up till you can hear it then back off.
Getting this right really depends on your monitoring. If your monitors can't do
anything below 40hz and you are mastering electronic/dance be careful as there can be a
lot going on down there. Listening from outside the control room with the door open seems
to help here. I have no idea why.
The next compressor is optional. If the tracks fairly dynamic I'll use one. It will
subtle though. It's a good way to make the multiband more predictable when going for
volume too.
Perversely, setting a very low threshold works here. You'd think that would mash the
track, as the compressor is working nearly all the time, but as the ratio is so low (1.2:1
or whatever) combined with a long release (1 sec or greater) it just smooths out the
dynamics before it hits the multiband. Soft knee is essential here. You should not hear
this 'working' at all ideally. An opto comp hear will let some peaks through but
still bring up the general ambience in a pleasent way.
You *want* to be using a multiband comp for volume.
Try finding the range where the vocals are and fitting your middle multibands around that.
You need to be able to solo bands to do this ideally. This means that the bass end
interfere won't with the vocals, so they don't duck when there is heavy kick or
bass. If the vocals remain up front you are half way there. If you have more bands, try
finding the space between the kick and bass. Don't go too heavy on the top end bands,
they should still have punch.
As a rule of thumb, I play the track through the multiband, and play with the thresholds
so each band is doing no more than 3-4db reduction at their respective loudest points,
perhaps less on the upper bands.
Then, play with the input level to the multiband to see what you can get away with.
You can get away with more compression in the low end than the high end, and the more you
control that low end the less the limiter has to try and control your kick/bass etc.
Also, using very fast attack/release in the upper bands can work well, but don't kill
the snare. Try soloing the low band and reducing the attack release until you begin to
hear distortion, then back off a long way.
Now the final limiter.
Ideally, the multiband is doing most of the work and the final limiter is not working
hard. If you try and get all your level control out of that limiter it's going to be
working too hard and everything will mash up. I can not get the same amount of clean
limiting out of any apps on Linux as I can out of a Finalizer or Waves L2. That's just
Life. :) If you are doing anything more than 6db reduction here, something is wrong
earlier in the chain.
Overloads on your final master.
Take care. If there are too many flattened peaks you can end up with a CD that sounds OK
on your player, but starts getting unpleasent on older/crappier ones. I have had this
happen, even with stuff that is not actually digitally clipped, just heavily limited. You
should not need to do hard digital clipping at all, ever. You will end up with high
frequency hash that will make radio station's limiters do odd things and some CD
players cry. If you are not getting the volume you need in other ways, buy or rent a
finalizer and stick it through that. It's got automatic wizards to get you most of the
way there. It's what everyone else does.
If you do want to drive it a bit, try mastering to a decent 2-track tape and pushing that.
Depending on the machine it'll get rid of peaks wonderfully.
Just mastering on to tape at a normal level and re-recording+normalising the result can
get you a few extra dbs without any obvious change to the sound.
A little clipping on an analog desk is not a problem. If it sounds good, go with it. :)
Just remember to keep an un-mashed master for when the current passion for square-waved
CDs dies away. Your clients will thank you for it someday.
But really, a Finalizer does this kind of thing really well. They don't sound great
but they do the job for volume.