Bullington

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於 2013年1月6日 (日) 02:57 由 Bullington (對話 | 貢獻) 所做的修訂 (新页面: So youre an artist that just recorded your first recording. You most likely went right into a recording studio and played all of one's pieces a few times, with the audio engineer managing...)

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So youre an artist that just recorded your first recording. You most likely went right into a recording studio and played all of one's pieces a few times, with the audio engineer managing all of the technical material. As far as you know, they should be able to just take all the elements they noted, burn it to a disc, and then it should be ready to press. While this isnt drastically wrong, many professional musicians take their mixed down saving and pass it down to somebody else for mastering.

What is mastering?

Learning is the final part of the production of a record where they increase the final polish to the recording. This really is done by formally enhancing the clarity of the mixes. This makes the compilation of songs seem more coherent, more together. And also this ensures that the combinations seem well on all listening devices.

Well, thats all fine and dandy, but does an expert mastering technician do when mastering a saving?

1. Volume Degree Maximization

This is to ensure that all music is at maximum volume, so that all tracks are at the exact same volume level. Actually watch evening TELEVISION, where in fact the volume of the advertisements are a couple notches more than the demonstrate were watching? If your professional mastering engineer was involved, they would raise the volume of TV show to complement the volume of the ads.

2. Ensuring a Regular Balance of Wavelengths

This ensures that all wavelengths are accounted for in the recording; bass, mids, and treble, so that there are no areas where there's no bass/mids/treble.

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3. Noise Reduction

This is the process of removing noise from an audio signal. When utilizing analog technology, sound tracks display a form of sound known as tape hiss. This really is linked to the particle size and surface used in the magnetic emulsion that's sprayed on the recording media, and also to the general tape pace across the tape heads.

4. Coding

A professional mastering lab might also take your saving and encode the UPC (Universal Product Code), ISRC (International Standard Recording Code), CD Text (more information about the CD, e.g. Recording name, artist name), and track name and other PQ information.

5. Error Examining

This guarantees the integrity of the information flow all through CD replication / reproduction at any CD manufacturing plant.

Still confused by what a specialist mastering engineer does to your CD audio saving when you hand it down to them? Dont worry, audio mastering is a very complex process. I just hope that you better realize why professional mastering can be an built-in area of the whole audio production process. It may produce a world of difference!