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  1. #1
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    can recommend Laurie and Chris very highly, had stuff mastered by both of them and its top notch

    also if your US based (or not im sure it's still valid), then Tim Xavier runs a great cutting and mastering studios in Brooklyn, USA, called Chopstick studios. Im not sure if they have a web addy but i presume so

  2. #2
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    from what i know of the subject, if you're getting tracks released the label should be paying for this anyway

  3. #3
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    that's one method yes, but alot of people like to get their stuff properly mastered before sending demo's out, all depends on the labels, producers needs etc etc

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    i just remember chris mccormatron once saying to me he hated having anything mastered by anyone else cause if it's your track, you want the end result to be the same...... and that sort of stuck with me. you don't want someone fiddling with your own sound. if you truly want to improve your sound, why would you want someone else adding the icing? i think if you don't understand how to master, sure use the expertise of someone like chris, but you need to ask yourself why, and learn it. that's coming from his very own lips... it's a very, very hard science, but it's well worth studying...

  5. #5
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    Hi Mark,
    That was refering to the time we cut your BOA001 record.

    I noticed the sound on my remix was odd, even in the unfamiliar room we were in, then saw the engineer was additionally squeezing my remix through a compressor to get more level onto the vinyl. That I personally didnt want. It was removing the feel of the track just for the sake of a louder cut. I never said anything about not wanting people touching my stuff in mastering! I have always loved getting my stuff mastered at different places, and always enjoyed giving the engineers complete free reign to do what they felt was needed.

    Cheers, Chris.

  6. #6
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    Quote Originally Posted by Chris McCormack View Post
    Hi Mark,
    That was refering to the time we cut your BOA001 record.

    I noticed the sound on my remix was odd, even in the unfamiliar room we were in, then saw the engineer was additionally squeezing my remix through a compressor to get more level onto the vinyl. That I personally didnt want. It was removing the feel of the track just for the sake of a louder cut. I never said anything about not wanting people touching my stuff in mastering! I have always loved getting my stuff mastered at different places, and always enjoyed giving the engineers complete free reign to do what they felt was needed.

    Cheers, Chris.
    A haaaa! I understood you wrong. Oh well it certainly made me look more into mastering anyway hehe.

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  8. #8
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    Yeah.. I was under the impression that for the most part you shouldn't master your own stuff because you have invested so much time into it that you will be missing things that others would catch..

    That's what that Dave Moulton guy says in the article above too.

 

 

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