Mastering VST? Mastering Program?
Hello, all.
I am in the middle of a home recording project with my band and was looking for a mastering VST (compressor/anything that will bring my recording to standard CD volume) that would work in Sony Sound Forge Audio Studio or Audacity OR a program that does just that. I already did the basics to my master track in Pro Tools (EQ, Dither, etc.), so it has the clarity that I want, but not the volume. Please note that the version of Sound Forge I have does not possess this capability. Thanks! |
Re: Mastering VST? Mastering Program?
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Re: Mastering VST? Mastering Program?
My demo of Ozone already expired :/.
Also, I'd like to say that all I need is a volume maximizer. |
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Re: Mastering VST? Mastering Program?
Have you tried using Maxim plugin that comes with Pro Tools?
Instantiate an instance of Maxim on the master track in PT & see what you think. It would be your cheapest option. |
Re: Mastering VST? Mastering Program?
Careful here MetalDrummer13, maximising the volume of a mix is just maximising the volume of a mix, it's not mastering! Maximising the volume of a mix is just one small part of the actual mastering process. A good mastering engineer (a rare breed) will analyse a track and adjust it's "feel" and balance, adding sparkle, warmth, width, clarity, depth, polish, etc. (and yes, volume). The mastering engineer will apply some or all of these based on experience, the musical style and the wishes/intentions of the producer. Lastly, it is the mastering engineers job to make the mix sound great on a wide variety of replay systems rather than it sounding it's best just in the studio in which it was mixed. From this simplified explanation of the mastering process you can see that there is not and cannot be any such thing a mastering plugin or automatic mastering process or program. Anything you see marketed as such is just that, marketing! If all you want to do is increase the volume then a limiter such as the Waves L2 or Massey 2007 would fit the bill.
One final observation, you said you had already applied dither. Dither should be the very last process applied to the track, eg., after volume maximising and any other mastering processes. G |
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