The whole -6db means to leave my Overall output master volume at -6?
I use ableton live can anyone give me a guidence?
Thank you
hey that was a great explanation and I can apply things form it. But my question is a fallowed. When im done with my track They want me to take out the "compressor" and "limitedrs" and lower my Master Volume to -6db or is there a method to do this? or should I leave it at 0(zero).? Im guessing they want this because they are going to master it perhaps. its for a small project with some company.gdev1981 wrote:It means that your meters for tracks, busses etc don't go above -6db
I wouldn't worry about it on track volumes but mastering engineers will often ask that your tune overall (the stereo out bus or similar) has some headroom (some -dbs so it is not right at the limit)
to make sure there is no digital clipping or unecessary limiting reducing the quality of your signal.
In a digital DAW like ableton you can go over 0db without issue (assuming it is a 32-bit floating point DAW) on tracks but if your master out or whatever goes over 0db (the top of the meter) you will get digital distortion so it would be best to lower the fader so the the peak (maximum volume) stays under 0db (IE in negative figures).
If you do your own mixdowns/ mastering etc. the rules change because you will be using your own limiter to keep it at or slightly below 0db and then also probably push the peaks up to reduce the difference between the average volume and maximum (dynamic range)
sorry if this is not what you were looking for, hope it helps!
Yeah mastering engineers have great hardware and software for compressing, limiting and EQing so they generally wouldn't want you to bother with any overall compression or limiting.daniohx wrote:hey that was a great explanation and I can apply things form it. But my question is a fallowed. When im done with my track They want me to take out the "compressor" and "limitedrs" and lower my Master Volume to -6db or is there a method to do this? or should I leave it at 0(zero).? Im guessing they want this because they are going to master it perhaps. its for a small project with some company.gdev1981 wrote:It means that your meters for tracks, busses etc don't go above -6db
I wouldn't worry about it on track volumes but mastering engineers will often ask that your tune overall (the stereo out bus or similar) has some headroom (some -dbs so it is not right at the limit)
to make sure there is no digital clipping or unecessary limiting reducing the quality of your signal.
In a digital DAW like ableton you can go over 0db without issue (assuming it is a 32-bit floating point DAW) on tracks but if your master out or whatever goes over 0db (the top of the meter) you will get digital distortion so it would be best to lower the fader so the the peak (maximum volume) stays under 0db (IE in negative figures).
If you do your own mixdowns/ mastering etc. the rules change because you will be using your own limiter to keep it at or slightly below 0db and then also probably push the peaks up to reduce the difference between the average volume and maximum (dynamic range)
sorry if this is not what you were looking for, hope it helps!
Yeah that's pretty much what I was trying to say,teva995 wrote:i thought generally, you can leave your compressor/eq on your individual tracks if they shape your sound, however you must make sure there are no plugins (compressors multibands eq's etc) on your MASTER track....
and then of course your master track should be around -6db to allow headroom for master engineers to boost some frequencies. Also with your individual tracks, you should make sure they are not above 0db else they may be digitally clipping which will cause distortion...
make sure you dont have any limiters/compressors on the master channel, every other channel is fine
I agree that you limit the dynamic range in the mix but the OP said he was doing a project for some company so it sounds like he got instructions from a mastering engineer and my advice was simply to help him follow their guidelines.jancivil wrote:I don't mind using a brickwall on the master bus and leaving it near 0 dB. I am doing a very subtle mix atm, nonetheless I am maximizing it from -2dB with a -0.2dB wall. This project has the dynamic range in spades, because that's in the content. I don't have any need to have some other person 'master' it, which to me is often enough someone solving mix problems second hand. "Mastering" used to mean making an audio artifact fit the media it's being made for and ensuring quality control eg., as far as matching levels from track to track. Now it seems to mean maximizing a file because it was too small a sound. This to me is a mixing question, and at times a question of the quality of the source material, recording quality... In any case, I always put a brickwall on the master bus.
My advice to any person new to mixing is to take every single thing you read about it, including what I just typed, with a goodly shaker of salt. A lot of the time someone's talking about something which won't apply to one's area of music, let alone a specific sound or mix requirement.
specific to the OP, if you will need to maximize the master file by 6dB (which is to me extreme), you'll tend to need at least 6dB headroom. IME, this situation is not a given and certainly results in no rule to follow religiously.
Is that the TT Dynamic Range Meter?gdev1981 wrote:TT loudness meter
shows peak average (RMS) and dynamic range!
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