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Audio-Ho
Wannabe

Joined: Oct 20, 2005
Posts: 17
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quality loss
ok so i mix my tune in nuendo it sounds great and clear i do an audio mixdown and pick the thing that looks highest quality which ends up being a wav64 which i can't burn straight to cd for whatever reason... i open it up in sound forge i'm happy so i leave it as it is i want to burn to cd the bastard won't let me do anything higher than 44khz 16 bit is sounds shit!!!!!!!! so i go back into nuendo like i'm not having that and find some mda or wav thing that lets me go a bit higher but yah same problem... Is it possible to get something higher quality than this piffle to a cd you no I spend ages on my tunes only to have them detroyed at the last moment of completion!!!!!!!!
so can someone explain where i am going wrong please? If you're gonna dis' my software please give alternatives and reasons please.
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Fri Oct 28, 2005 7:20 pm |
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Audio-Ho
Wannabe

Joined: Oct 20, 2005
Posts: 17
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So what your saying is there's nothing i can do about it, right? ok so why does the volume get reduced so much as well? is there something i can do about that? Cause it seriously goes so much quieter as well it's frustrating.
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Sat Oct 29, 2005 4:37 pm |
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Audio-Ho
Wannabe

Joined: Oct 20, 2005
Posts: 17
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Yah i didn't compress or limit my track because i was happy with the way it sounded... I left it so it was about -2 db at it's maximum peak it was pumping pretty loud but not distorting nice and clear like until i had to convert it for cd... Could I put it back into sony sound forge as the "cd ready" file (for want of a better name) and boost the volume back up then do it again and it be ok or would that totally muss it all up?
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Sat Oct 29, 2005 4:53 pm |
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Audio-Ho
Wannabe

Joined: Oct 20, 2005
Posts: 17
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Well, then i guess i'll have to try it and see which is the lesser of the evils... at what point do i do it after or before i have converted it to cd quality?
call me a spannor too but i didn't manage to find a limiter on sony sound forge?
thanks
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Sat Oct 29, 2005 5:19 pm |
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Audio-Ho
Wannabe

Joined: Oct 20, 2005
Posts: 17
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aww
Thank you!
ps a spanner is a tool.
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Sat Oct 29, 2005 6:06 pm |
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RhoneRanger
Engineer

Joined: Nov 04, 2005
Posts: 332
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mastering process
| BlueBearSound wrote: |
I have no idea what a "spannor" is, but in Sound Forge, you can use WaveHammer. All processing should be applied BEFORE any dithering/downsampling to Redbook (CD specs)....
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SO, I am using Cubase SX3, and am still relatively new to the mastering process. Do you mean that you mixdown (raw) to 1 stereo track before you do the limiting?
What i have been doing is limiting just before the output, and doing the audio->export mixdown option.
SO, it is better to mixdown to a track, save that one, then do your signal processing on that?
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Sun Nov 20, 2005 5:12 am |
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AC
Chief

Joined: Oct 31, 2002
Posts: 1071
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master
| RhoneRanger wrote: |
| BlueBearSound wrote: |
I have no idea what a "spannor" is, but in Sound Forge, you can use WaveHammer. All processing should be applied BEFORE any dithering/downsampling to Redbook (CD specs)....
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SO, I am using Cubase SX3, and am still relatively new to the mastering process. Do you mean that you mixdown (raw) to 1 stereo track before you do the limiting?
What i have been doing is limiting just before the output, and doing the audio->export mixdown option.
SO, it is better to mixdown to a track, save that one, then do your signal processing on that? |
If I have understood you correctly then yes... mix your track to a stereo file. Then come back a week or so later and master the stereo track. Or even better send it to a pro mastering engineer for best results.
 _________________ Recording Studio Suntans
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Sun Nov 20, 2005 1:24 pm |
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AC
Chief

Joined: Oct 31, 2002
Posts: 1071
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experience
No I am not a pro mastering engineer.
The difference would be the room they master in, sometimes hundreds of thousands of pounds worth of acoustics and monitor speakers, plus decades of listening experience.
They typically make small changes which make large differences. _________________ Recording Studio Suntans
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Sun Nov 20, 2005 6:38 pm |
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