Mix Tips that I tell my clients
November 28, 2009
ACMastering

There’s three parts in the sound production process when you’re making a CD: recording, mixing and mastering.  Although these three stages may overlap somewhat, they are three distinct parts, each with their own guidelines, concerns and tools.   Here’s some simple guidelines I tell my clients to ensure good results in Mastering:

1.  Don’t push the level in mixing, that’s my job in mastering.  Just focus on making the mix sound great.   Compression on the individual tracks is fine but minimal compression on the mix buss!  It can’t be undone leaves me no room for mastering.
 
2.  Definitely no limiting or mastering plugins on your Mix Buss!   It’s only likely to degrade the sound and if the level is pushed too much, I will just ask you to remix it.  

3.  Leave 3-6 db of headroom. In other words the level does not even need to touch  ‘0’dbfs on peak digital meters. This leaves the headroom that’s needed for mastering.  Pushing the level will only augment ugly distortion Mastering.
   
4. Don’t  Normalize your tracks, as this only degrades the quality of audio.
   
5. Try and record at the highest level bit rate (24 bit if possible) as this gives more headroom. So 44.1 24 bit or 96k 24 bit etc. It’s not critical  if you haven’t done this, it just helps.  Also, don’t change sample rates , this also should be left for the mastering stage.
   
6. NO DITHERING ! This is left to the mastering engineer.
   
7. Clean up your tracks - it’s a lot harder for me to get rid of the guitar player sighing, or a singer clearing his throat  after it’s mixed.  Solo all live audio tracks and take a listen to what’s there-you might even get a chuckle!  

8.  Send songs as Audio Data files (.WAV or .AIFF). NOT MP3 files!   Just compare file sizes between the different file formats and you will see that mp3 are only 1/10th the amount of data.  What do you think is missing?

9. When mixing, keep in mind that reverb levels will probably be enhanced a little with mastering, so often times holding back a little with the reverb during mixing, yields nicer results.

Article originally appeared on Music Think Tank (https://www.musicthinktank.com/).
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