only experience teaches you how far to push certain elements in a raw mix, knowing that they'll change when mastering processing is applied....
a lot of guys put a compressor across the 2 buss, JUST so they'll know where they sit with the mix, in regards to the master session...
but you gotta know that the master is going to be done in a certain way, and then you have to APPROXIMATE the compression scheme in the same direction.
THEN you take that compressor off the main buss, when actually bouncing down your final mix.
but there's lots of assumptions there, and you will NEVER have gear that will be as good as what the ME uses for compression and limiting on the final product...
bottom line is, it's always best to try to get the mix to sound as finished as you think it should sound...
but if you apply compression on your PRE-mastered mix, you are painted into that corner permanently.
me?
i master my tunes myself, in WAVELAB, not cause i wanna, but it's what i got, what i can afford to do.
so, i know how i'm going to master it, and i do my submixes accordingly
i apply compression to some of my sub busses:
i seperate overheads to their own buss, and compress......
kick and snare get compression on individual channels....
the rest of the kit is unaffected, and all but overheads go to a master drum buss.....
bass gets channel compression, and still goes to it's own buss....
vocals get individual channel compression, but all go to a vocal buss....
and sometimes i slap a very conservative compressor across the vocal buss, to glue them all together..
guitars get no processing, but go to a sub buss....
then all get routed to the master, and the master gets a very specific single band compressor across it, for an almost inaudible effect.
it is my glue.
post edited by batsbrew - 2009/09/29 14:31:31