Helpful ReplyBad Mix vs Mastering

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Soundblend
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2015/11/21 09:35:52 (permalink)

Bad Mix vs Mastering

EDIT: Track deleted.....
post edited by Soundblend - 2015/11/25 13:09:01
#1
bitflipper
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Re: Bad Mix vs Mastering 2015/11/21 10:22:44 (permalink)
There is a basic principle that spans all engineering disciplines, which is that the earlier in the process you get it right, the better. Imagine the cost of making an automotive design change when the car's still on paper versus a global recall.
 
It's harder to fix a badly-recorded track or a sloppy performance through editing than it is to just re-record it. It's harder to fix such a track in the mix, which is why "we'll fix it in the mix" became an ongoing insider joke. (Frank Zappa once quipped "we'll fix it in the shrinkwrap".) And of course a bad mix can't be saved in the mastering stage any more than a weak record can be improved by playing it on a high-end audiophile system.
 
That said, I'm not sure your sample track illustrates the principle very convincingly. The "bad mix" simply isn't nearly bad enough. It's actually not bad.
 


All else is in doubt, so this is the truth I cling to. 

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#2
Soundblend
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Re: Bad Mix vs Mastering 2015/11/21 11:40:18 (permalink)
A friend of mine here in Norway hired someone to do the production of this song in USA
all the sounds and mixing was done there...

He did receive one un-mastered file, and one mastered, he was unhappy with the mastered version
Way to much boomy and low end
post edited by Soundblend - 2015/11/21 18:54:28
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TheMaartian
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Re: Bad Mix vs Mastering 2015/11/21 12:01:35 (permalink)
bitflipper
There is a basic principle that spans all engineering disciplines, which is that the earlier in the process you get it right, the better....

Spot on. AT&T (well, Bell Labs), did a study decades ago on the cost of fixing software bugs.
 
Crudely stated:
the cost to repair a defect in high level design is X
the cost to repair the same defect in low level design is 10X
the cost to repair the same defect in manufacturing is 100X
the cost to repair the same defect in the field is 1000X
 
My experience has proven those orders of magnitude to be pretty close to real world.
 
VW is going to find this out. The hard way.
post edited by TheMaartian - 2015/11/21 12:14:01

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Re: Bad Mix vs Mastering 2015/11/21 13:01:30 (permalink)
I will receive the master, that my friend got from the " Producers " in USA
later tonight.

I have not yet heard it yet, for a reason
so i could  master with my own fresh ears.

looking forward to hear what they have done !!!

EDIT: the master was not good at all...
post edited by Soundblend - 2015/11/21 21:38:29
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Soundblend
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Re: Bad Mix vs Mastering 2015/11/21 13:14:09 (permalink)
bitflipper
There is a basic principle that spans all engineering disciplines, which is that the earlier in the process you get it right, the better. Imagine the cost of making an automotive design change when the car's still on paper versus a global recall.
 
It's harder to fix a badly-recorded track or a sloppy performance through editing than it is to just re-record it. It's harder to fix such a track in the mix, which is why "we'll fix it in the mix" became an ongoing insider joke. (Frank Zappa once quipped "we'll fix it in the shrinkwrap".) And of course a bad mix can't be saved in the mastering stage any more than a weak record can be improved by playing it on a high-end audiophile system.


I totally Agree

bitflipper
 That said, I'm not sure your sample track illustrates the principle very convincingly. The "bad mix" simply isn't nearly bad enough. It's actually not bad.
 


On that one i do not agree, i have heard better mixes most of the time
but also some few worse..
post edited by Soundblend - 2015/11/21 13:30:16
#6
batsbrew
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Re: Bad Mix vs Mastering 2015/11/21 13:35:41 (permalink) ☄ Helpfulby Soundblend 2015/11/21 14:09:47
you never fix mistakes in a mastering session.
 
i repeat:
never
never
never
never
never
never
never
never
never
 
 
and just to be sure this is clear....................
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
fix it in the mix.

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Re: Bad Mix vs Mastering 2015/11/21 13:39:56 (permalink)
that's correct and i know that, and luckily its not my mix 

I just got the file from my friend,and he asked me politely " can you master it for me ? "
...so i did.

If this had been a paying customer, and i had a name within mixing and mastering
i would point out the problems, and send em back to redo the whole mix.

Two things would may happen then

1. They would have done what i said, and come back with a better mix
2. They would go to someone else, and i would never see them again
post edited by Soundblend - 2015/11/21 14:09:13
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batsbrew
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Re: Bad Mix vs Mastering 2015/11/21 19:14:56 (permalink) ☄ Helpfulby Soundblend 2015/11/21 19:30:22
some jobs are not worth taking.
 
the best job i ever had, was the one i walked away from.
because it turned into a nightmare for someone else
 

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#9
Soundblend
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Re: Bad Mix vs Mastering 2015/11/21 21:26:07 (permalink)
Nothing to see here...
post edited by Soundblend - 2015/11/22 20:03:53
#10
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Re: Bad Mix vs Mastering 2015/11/22 01:46:52 (permalink) ☄ Helpfulby Soundblend 2015/11/22 05:26:20
Personally, I like the master (the 2nd half) because it seems to be louder, BUT it also brings out the nuances of the instruments and vocals more. I hear the filters in the bass synth more and the breath in the vocals. Bet it sounds better on PA speakers too.

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Re: Bad Mix vs Mastering 2015/11/22 05:47:46 (permalink)
Yepp the first part is the original mix only ( not mastered )

The problem with the song is to much variation in the track's and an overall "dull" mix

some problems to point out :

1. to much bass, cluttered and boxy low end and overall dull mix
2. the filtered sharp sounding synth behind the vocals and the placement of it ( should be more panned as well )
3. lack of details in the mid range, in some track's
4. way more present high end in the drums, compared to rest of the track's
5. unbalanced vocal, some places the vocal is more upfront

to mention something..


EDIT: Made a new Master
In this last " mastering " i made it simple using only :

1. Channel tools to add a tad of more side signal, and adjust the left channel by -1 db
2. Prochannel EQ
3. Concrete limiter

Thats all ....

What i have learned, the more you stack up with plugins like EQ's and so forth
you most likely will " loose " overall control over the sound and probably mess it up more.

When you take away ( attenuate ) frequencies to adjust the overall EQ, other frequencies will boost
that is an issue when mastering a stereo track, it wont help to attenuate those as well, then you will
end up at point zero again.

Less is more :
When mastering.. keep it to a minimum, listen and adjust carefully
be sure to take breaks, and rest your ears....
if you don't get the sound you want at the final, start fresh and do it all over again.

I would love to use an MB compressor before the limiter to tame some frequencies
but cakewalks MB compressor, just did not help out in this case...

Well i am not quite satisfied, there's to much bright end in the master on the drums
but what can you expect, of an unbalanced mix....

As said by others, do it right in the Mix to begin with, or you will get trouble at the " mastering stage "

At last, the best way is to hire a great Mastering studio to do the JOB, they have all the best hardware equipment
and gear for the job , as well well great treated room and several monitors and have great experience.

If you cant afford that, well maybe the way is to go with hardware DSP cards and UAD plugins
But you need a good room to mix in as well, and be sure to know what you're doing and what to do, and not to do.

Hope this is helpful to someone..
post edited by Soundblend - 2015/11/22 21:34:45
#12
Soundblend
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Re: Bad Mix vs Mastering 2015/11/22 06:36:28 (permalink)
EDIT :

New image
 Made a new Master
post edited by Soundblend - 2015/11/22 19:44:37
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Jesse Screed
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Re: Bad Mix vs Mastering 2015/11/22 08:59:18 (permalink)
I am finding too, that what the experienced forum members are sharing is true.  Though the following may appear as if I am being obtuse, I think it is another example of the general bent of this thread.  The University of Strategic Highway Research Council found similarly the same truth. 
 
https://www.extension.iastate.edu/forestry/publications/PDF_files/SHRP-H-320.pdf
 
Scroll to page three.  I have copied this and placed it above my monitor.
 
I know, weird, but I have always been an ideator, though not one of popular merit.  So although you may find this of no use to your particular issue, the concept seems to be universal, at least to me.
 
Jesse
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orangesporanges
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Re: Bad Mix vs Mastering 2015/11/22 16:09:18 (permalink)
My wife made an astute observation on one of my masters recently. I asked her which sounded better master 3 or 4. She said very calmly that she could not really tell the difference in a studio environment. She went on to say that in a real listening environment, like while at work or in the car, she doubted very much if she would notice  ANY difference. I followed her advice and picked my favorite and started  my next song.

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codamedia
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Re: Bad Mix vs Mastering 2015/11/22 18:32:16 (permalink) ☄ Helpfulby Soundblend 2015/11/24 08:16:35
I'll just add my 2 cents, even though they aren't much different than what has already been said.
 
Fixing a bad mix in a master is like trying to fix a bad take (vocal, guitar, etc...) in the mix. It's better to go back and get it right to begin with - whenever possible. Having it right open the doors to options and creatively in the next process... rather than back tracking and trying to fix things.... which is terribly counter productive.
post edited by codamedia - 2015/11/22 18:43:52

Don't fix it in the mix ... Fix it in the take! 
 

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Re: Bad Mix vs Mastering 2015/11/22 19:42:09 (permalink) ☄ Helpfulby Soundblend 2015/11/22 20:35:45
Interestingly, I have been trying to use this point as leverage to get an old friend to step into the DAW world. He has done some amazing things with a Tascam 424 4-track (overdubbed BGV and the whole nine yards), and he feeds bass/kick in one track with a Zoom RT-234. He definitely has a "one-take" philosophy, so all the aptitude is there, it is just getting across the "mix" aspect.
 
To add insult to injury (for me), he had sent me stereo mix downs which were not so great, so I spruced them up to "decent" fairly easily. For him this was "magic," but for me I have been trying to drive home more possibilities. I have told him repeatedly, "If you give me 24-bit stems I can really show you something," but so far that has hit an impasse. 1) Using a DAW is foreign ground for him, and 2) he lacks hardware necessary. When I started doing things with him he began looking at guitars/amps (his setup is perfectly fine!), and I simply said, "You are killing me here... look at interfaces." In a way this is highly comedic, but terribly frustrating.
 
Hopefully I can goad him across that bridge at some point, but I can commiserate with the OP because of this one... I do not expect a great mix, but also do not expect a great master - not possible.

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Soundblend
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Re: Bad Mix vs Mastering 2015/11/22 19:47:06 (permalink)
mhh.. what can i say, i tried to mix after a spectrum analyzer with M/S signal
that went very.. very bad, even if i used a Demo of Fabfilter PRO Q 2 ... Duhhh..

The clue is to use your ears and make it simple, and that worked... forget the meters XD

In this last " master " i used :

1. Channel tools to add a tad side signal, and adjust the left channel by -1 db
2. Prochannel EQ
3. Concrete limiter

Image :

post edited by Soundblend - 2015/11/25 13:10:43
#18
Soundblend
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Re: Bad Mix vs Mastering 2015/11/22 20:33:54 (permalink)
mettelus
Interestingly, I have been trying to use this point as leverage to get an old friend to step into the DAW world. He has done some amazing things with a Tascam 424 4-track (overdubbed BGV and the whole nine yards), and he feeds bass/kick in one track with a Zoom RT-234. He definitely has a "one-take" philosophy, so all the aptitude is there, it is just getting across the "mix" aspect.
 
To add insult to injury (for me), he had sent me stereo mix downs which were not so great, so I spruced them up to "decent" fairly easily. For him this was "magic," but for me I have been trying to drive home more possibilities. I have told him repeatedly, "If you give me 24-bit stems I can really show you something," but so far that has hit an impasse. 1) Using a DAW is foreign ground for him, and 2) he lacks hardware necessary. When I started doing things with him he began looking at guitars/amps (his setup is perfectly fine!), and I simply said, "You are killing me here... look at interfaces." In a way this is highly comedic, but terribly frustrating.
 
Hopefully I can goad him across that bridge at some point, but I can commiserate with the OP because of this one... I do not expect a great mix, but also do not expect a great master - not possible.




I have a new friend now by a music group in FB, that uses Boss BR-800 i think to record with
He asked questions why he could not get anywhere.. no one answered, rather than me.
He was very pleased with some answers, and i did comment a lot, bad and good, he struggles with tempo issues and
the solo on the guitar etc.., but he's improving.

I told him to get a DAW software, then recommended Sonar Artist to start off with, i now have him
as a Facebook friend, and i did remote control his computer with Teamviewer, to set Sonar up for him
and with a template with some tracks and buss'es..
I have contact with him and give him advice about his takes ( recording's ), and mixing at a basic level
to help him improve his songs.
post edited by Soundblend - 2015/11/24 08:18:39
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