Here's a totally moronic question from a total moron.
What's the difference between mixing and mastering?
Mastering engineers were originally there to prevent problems when music got pressed to vinyl. If you had any bass notes that were too sub-sonic it could cause the needle to literally jump out of the groove. This becomes more likely as you get nearer the centre of the record because the grooves are closer together and the dividing walls thinner.
Today they ensure album makes sense tonally and in terms of level and also running order.
From what Im reading "Real" mastering is pretty technical however they probably have software programs to do most of the tech side of it...Im guessing they do.
Programs like sequia and the like.
Vincent - the software that Jon Astley (
http://www.closetotheedge.biz/about.htm ) used when we attended the mastering session for the Cool Beyond Zero album was Sadie , but that really wasn't the most technical bit. It was more or less used as a tape recorder and no more involved than any DAW I've ever used. He also used some of the same Waves & Sonnox plugins I have myself.
Most of the 'magic' came from the analogue stuff he routed the songs through and his experienced ears just honing in on problems right away.
For those that never saw the original thread there's a full account of what happened on that mastering day here which is probably a typical days work for a Mastering Engineer:
http://www.musicianscollaboration.com/forum/index.php?topic=7466.0I think the divide between mixing and mastering in hobbiest music has become somewhat blurred, as alot of folks will compress/limit/eq a song afterwards but I would always keep a version without any of that processing on too because we had trouble with some of the CBZ songs where Marc the bass player had mixed them with these things in place and we couldn't undo them, so it ended up being somewhat compromised.
CD
We never finish a mix... we simply abandon them.
You can't polish a turd, but you can always spray paint it GOLD
Great songs are not written, they are re-witten