ArthurWankspittle wrote:I'm still trying to get my head round what I'm looking at and hearing with those mastered tracks. What is actually being done to them? Is it the volume being tweaked around certain frequencies? What is the actual process being applied?
Mastering is...
1. Transferring audio track mixes to the workstation
2. Laying out the sequence of songs (or tracks) as they will appear on the final release.
3. Process the audio to maximize sound quality for it's medium, which involves...
a. editing minor flaws
b. applying noise reduction
c. adding ambience
d. equalizing the audio across the tracks (to impose consistency)
e. adjusting the volume
f. adding dynamic range or compression
g. adjusting stereo width
h. imposing a peak limit to the CD (i.e. how loud the overall CD will be)
Once that's taken care of, track markers are inserted along with International Standard Recording Codes (ISRC, the digital fingerprint for each track that denotes who owns the music) along with time code that delineate start & stop times for each song and the spaces between.
Mastering is audio adjustments performed to the final stereo mixes unifying the overall sound and sonic impact of the tunes in the album (CD, demo, DVD, LP, MP3, etc.) before going to manufacturing, replication or uploading songs for end listeners (the fans).
In other words, it is the opportunity to make sure each song has the same tone, bass and highs, and the same overall volume so the end listener never has to touch their volume knob song to song and plays back evenly over radio and on the multitude of consumer playback systems and environments (from cars to headphones to supermarkets boom boxes, computer and so forth).
On a unmastered mix, you would have to adjust your EQ and volume controls from song to song as mixes don't come out of a studio sounding the way they do on CD. Some are too loud, some aren't loud enough, some are thin across bass/treble, etc.
As for what is being done to them:
Yes, there's some EQ adjustments going on but there's also harmonic, dynamic and stereo image processing. The compression/expansion is what gives each song it's loudness/volume consistency across the entire CD.
This is generally what a mix sounds like in the studio prior to mastering.
This is what the same mix sounds like after it has been subjected to the mastering process.