You can't get proper opinions from anybody here unless you provide the ORIGINAL file as a comparison. None of the things we hear can be commented on before we have the original file you sent to mastering as reference.
So, as long as you understand this, here are my opinions on the song as a whole in terms of audio fidelity:
- It's quite over processed sounding.. but again, this may be your mix that is the problem, not the master. Impossible to tell without the original as reference.
- Yes the bass is quite saturated and there's a lot of not at all musical pumping happening (meaning the pumping isn't properly in time with the track and instead sounds rather "nervous"). Again, could be your original mix that is the problem here. Impossible to tell.
- Yes, there IS some quite severe clipping on various mid frequency elements towards the end of the soundcloud snippet.. most clearly heard where you have some pad/delay thing happening slightly panned to the right.
Mastering is always a two way street and needs good communication. So unless you are getting good back and forth communication with the person you used for mastering then you may as well request a refund and do it yourself or use some AI mastering service. The whole point of doing mastering, which seems to be completely forgotten in this day and age, is to get a non-biased 2nd opinion and thus a reliable unbiased final polish to the mix so that it plays well on as many audio systems as possible. And yes, for some genres (and clients) it's all about getting it loud while doing as little damage to the original mix as possible.
.. yeah.. no. But that is indeed what a completely unprofessional mastering engineer would do and think, and indeed a monkey could do that. I highly recommend not paying monkeys.jamcat wrote: Wed Aug 28, 2024 10:34 pm You should get a refund and master it yourself.
"Mastering" these days just involves exporting the track at the proper LUFS for the particular target streaming service(s). A monkey could do that. If you don't have a monkey, use a preset.
It won't come out any worse, either way.