[ddots-l] Re: mastering question

  • From: "neville" <neville@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
  • To: <ddots-l@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
  • Date: Tue, 1 Mar 2011 15:11:38 -0500

So what do you think? How is this? 

RMS level (dB)                          -12.765                 -12.506

Average value (dB)                      -63.865                 -62.705


These are the statistics of my most recent project. 

May the peace  of God which passes all understanding guard your heart and
mind in Christ Jesus. God bless you!

Music soft sacred and soulful 

Website http://www.nevillepeter.com

email neville@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx

phone 407-222-4488


-----Original Message-----
From: ddots-l-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx [mailto:ddots-l-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx] On
Behalf Of Chris Smart
Sent: Tuesday, March 01, 2011 12:24 PM
To: ddots-l@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
Subject: [ddots-l] Re: mastering question

Hi Neville.

In that iZotope Limiter, Try a preset that is not as aggressive, 
like "Classical, light and responsive".

Unfortunately, we can't edit parameters in there, so you're right 
that learning to do this in Sonar, with a limiter plug-in on the 
master bus, is a better approach.  No preset is going to work for 
all styles of music, or even individual tracks of the same style.
Have you checked out the Boost11 limiter? It has only two sliders 
to fiddle with.

Also, in Sound Forge, check out the statistics of your file - alt+t 
then S.  You're interested in two lines, one that lists the highest 
peak in your file, the other that gives the average volume 
(RMS).  How far apart those numbers are, tells you approximately 
how much dynamic range your material has.  The technical term for 
this difference is "crest factor".

Recent pop or hard rock albums seem to have -11 or less dynamic 
range, which is pretty extreme. That's why they sound so loud, and 
why your ears get tired of them quickly.

All the way to the other end of the spectrum, we get classical and 
other acoustic styles that have maybe 20dB of difference between 
peak and average loudness.  The peaks are just as high as in the 
pop recordings, but the average loudness is lower, so they sound 
quieter overall.

If I'm working on rock or pop, I usually shoot for around -14dB RMS 
and peaking no higher than say 0.1dB. I go further if the client 
complains that it doesn't sound loud enough. But really, people 
should just turn up the volume on their stereo, iPod etc.

Chris

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