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ryanr wrote:carlozpaz wrote:just a bit off topic but just wanted to show you how they produced "turn up the music" by chris brown
it´s the toxicated kit in vengeance future music vol 4.
what do you think about this? do you think it´s ok to use a melody of a music library?
check it out:
I dont know the Chris Brown track, but those samples sound very similar to Nicky Romero 'Toulouse' so dunno if vengenance have nicked the samples of toulouse then chris brown used the vengenace samples of it or what?
carlozpaz wrote:just a bit off topic but just wanted to show you how they produced "turn up the music" by chris brown
it´s the toxicated kit in vengeance future music vol 4.
what do you think about this? do you think it´s ok to use a melody of a music library?
check it out:
djavallo wrote:Anyone knows how to get that pretty good clap ?
it makes amazing atmosphere at the drop, it sound like drums play all the time, at the same pattern as the kick do.
i mean @ 2.20
and like there @ 2.50
music4life wrote:carlozpaz wrote:just a bit off topic but just wanted to show you how they produced "turn up the music" by chris brown
it´s the toxicated kit in vengeance future music vol 4.
what do you think about this? do you think it´s ok to use a melody of a music library?
check it out:
its funny you bring this up because before i saw this i was going through the exact library and found out that the whole song is made out of those loops. i watched your video and you missed out on the other loop that was used, in the orginial track theres a section with this dutch sounding bleep, its also within vengeance future music 4, its called the riser kit and its melody 1F
music4life wrote:guys im lookin at sending one of my tracks to get mastered. However theres a problem with my track that i dont no if i should change or not?
the problem is that my song falls and drops in volume quite un-naturally when the drop comes, however when i put a limiter on the master it prevents it from doing so and sounds normal.
Because i have to send my song without anything on the master chain to be mastered, that means im gonna have to remove the limiter which causes the volume levels to be all over the place.
So would it be ok to send the track to the mastering engineer to take care of the problem? or is this something that i should fix prior to sending it out to be mastered?
E-Tjen wrote:music4life wrote:guys im lookin at sending one of my tracks to get mastered. However theres a problem with my track that i dont no if i should change or not?
the problem is that my song falls and drops in volume quite un-naturally when the drop comes, however when i put a limiter on the master it prevents it from doing so and sounds normal.
Because i have to send my song without anything on the master chain to be mastered, that means im gonna have to remove the limiter which causes the volume levels to be all over the place.
So would it be ok to send the track to the mastering engineer to take care of the problem? or is this something that i should fix prior to sending it out to be mastered?
It's not a problem. Just make sure your mix is right, and you might use some equalizing on your master. Check your mix on several systems, at home, in the car, everywhere, and let other people hear it too. Especially in the beginning this might give you some tips about how to change it.
It's quite logical there is a volume difference when you exclude the limiter or a compressor, since it'll increase loudness to 0db of each instrument you put through it, and a compressor levels everything out that you put into it (reducing your dynamic range, which is the difference between soft and loud sounds).
Someone who will master your record will preferably need a mix of under 0 db, because if it's higher it induces clipping (cutting of the signal).
If you were to deliver a mix that is completely at the same level (due to compression), then it might be overcompressed after mastering.
Hope this helps! Make sure it doesn't clip (rise above 0 db) and you're fine if the mix is fine.
E-Tjen wrote:music4life wrote:guys im lookin at sending one of my tracks to get mastered. However theres a problem with my track that i dont no if i should change or not?
the problem is that my song falls and drops in volume quite un-naturally when the drop comes, however when i put a limiter on the master it prevents it from doing so and sounds normal.
Because i have to send my song without anything on the master chain to be mastered, that means im gonna have to remove the limiter which causes the volume levels to be all over the place.
So would it be ok to send the track to the mastering engineer to take care of the problem? or is this something that i should fix prior to sending it out to be mastered?
It's not a problem. Just make sure your mix is right, and you might use some equalizing on your master. Check your mix on several systems, at home, in the car, everywhere, and let other people hear it too. Especially in the beginning this might give you some tips about how to change it.
It's quite logical there is a volume difference when you exclude the limiter or a compressor, since it'll increase loudness to 0db of each instrument you put through it, and a compressor levels everything out that you put into it (reducing your dynamic range, which is the difference between soft and loud sounds).
Someone who will master your record will preferably need a mix of under 0 db, because if it's higher it induces clipping (cutting of the signal).
If you were to deliver a mix that is completely at the same level (due to compression), then it might be overcompressed after mastering.
Hope this helps! Make sure it doesn't clip (rise above 0 db) and you're fine if the mix is fine.
mauricio wrote:E-Tjen wrote:music4life wrote:guys im lookin at sending one of my tracks to get mastered. However theres a problem with my track that i dont no if i should change or not?
the problem is that my song falls and drops in volume quite un-naturally when the drop comes, however when i put a limiter on the master it prevents it from doing so and sounds normal.
Because i have to send my song without anything on the master chain to be mastered, that means im gonna have to remove the limiter which causes the volume levels to be all over the place.
So would it be ok to send the track to the mastering engineer to take care of the problem? or is this something that i should fix prior to sending it out to be mastered?
It's not a problem. Just make sure your mix is right, and you might use some equalizing on your master. Check your mix on several systems, at home, in the car, everywhere, and let other people hear it too. Especially in the beginning this might give you some tips about how to change it.
It's quite logical there is a volume difference when you exclude the limiter or a compressor, since it'll increase loudness to 0db of each instrument you put through it, and a compressor levels everything out that you put into it (reducing your dynamic range, which is the difference between soft and loud sounds).
Someone who will master your record will preferably need a mix of under 0 db, because if it's higher it induces clipping (cutting of the signal).
If you were to deliver a mix that is completely at the same level (due to compression), then it might be overcompressed after mastering.
Hope this helps! Make sure it doesn't clip (rise above 0 db) and you're fine if the mix is fine.
I would include a detailed description of what you think about it and how it should be handled. For example:
A big level drop could be part of the song. The person mastering your track could have different taste and ideas about how much a track should drop during the breakdowns and builds.
The mastering engineer is gonna try to bring out the best from your work, while not making drastic changes to the way he feels you're trying to deliver your message.
Justice during their DJ sets always does these super huge level drops... They think it helps to emphesize their "big" moments. I think it totally kills the atmosphere. If I got a Justice DJ set to master for release
then I would probably automate the maximizer and pull the thresh down during those parts to bring the level up. But that's not what Justice is doing... you get what I'm saying?
I would route your song to some premaster channels, and do some level riding before sending it out. Getting it to a "good enough" level that you're happy with WITHOUT the use of compressors or limiters. You're best tool is a Dorrough Meter to judge the average levels of parts and either bring them up or down
gikkel wrote:@music4life Yes, you should address your jump in volume. Conventional wisdom indicates your compressor shouldnt be increasing your volume because what sounds louder sounds better, but its not always possible. Can you post your track?
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