Support |
Krispen Hartung wrote: > I've been doing a lot of mastering and mixing lately on a project and > have learned a lot of new methods and techniques. I've heard folks > say mastering and mixing is a black art, now I know why. In these > particular songs, they sounded wonderful on my headphones. There were > some really cool and deep things going on in the 44hz range and below, > and some others in the 62hz range. It all sounded great through my > headphones, but those frequencies were reeking havoc on my consumer > stereo systems - car stereo, portable stereo, etc. Hi Kris, I recommend that you do not mix using headphones. That is an even more phony environment than stereo speakers. Speakers pushing air to your ears is closer to how you hear a live event than headphones. Mixing and mastering are two different processes. I recommend that you do not master songs one at a time in isolation. One ought to master an album's worth of songs together. Not all at once but as a set. How you want to volume balance, equalize, and compress things is very dependent upon the song order. Concentrate only on mixing. Save mastering for last and use a pro if you can afford it. If you are having bass region problems, there could be many reasons; the system, the speakers, speaker placement, the room, and on and on ad infinitum. I'd look at what track in the song is supplying the bass that breaks up in certain systems. Work on that track's EQ and compression then remix the song. Can you mix using your portable stereo? If if sounds great there, that's how 90% of your audience will hear the song. Then compare the result through you regular studio speakers and then headphones. Listen to your mixes in as many environments as possible. Take what I and everyone else tell you with a few grains of salt and experiment on your own. Mixing *is* a black art. Cheers, Bill