PauPeu wrote: ↑Thu Apr 27, 2023 11:28 CEST
It seems many people have the LUFS problem. I also had this same problem in my firsts mixes in this competition.
I strongly recommend using an audio editor after printing the track, so you can normalize the volume at -16 lufs, I use RX7 that have a specific module to achieve this. But I am sure there are many others.
You can use the free
https://www.meldaproduction.com/MLoudnessAnalyzer as a VST to check the LUFS values online.
In REAPER (which I use) you can add the SWS extension which includes offline loudness analysis. Further, since one year or so, REAPER displays the LUFS values while rendering.
It really can be that simple.
Michael_K wrote: ↑Thu Apr 27, 2023 12:01 CEST
m_tree wrote: ↑Wed Apr 26, 2023 16:11 CEST
As far as I know it's usual to send the mix with a good amount of headroom to the mastering studio. And, of course, without limiting and too much processing on the mixbus. The mastering sounds better with preserved peaks on the mixbus.
This used to be mostly the case. However these days anything goes. The specs are made by the client. A very large number of major ladel and pop mixes involve mixing/mastering at the same time. Some of these mixes go to -8lufs and even -6lufs. It doesn't mean it is right or wrong. Whatever works in each case. I think we have to be able to adapt and adhere to the requirements of each project.
However I do believe that when doing a mix it is important to know if it will be mastered extra loud in order to take that into account while mixing.
Of course, it's indivudally. I already sent mixes to mastering studios. Even when I mastered my self I often did this in a second step / project.
I think it's also important to know for which platform or medium the production is mastered. For example - when I master for Youtube I always will go somehwere between -13.5 and -14 LUFS integrated, because Youtube always normalizes on -14. Most of the streaming platforms normalizes on such moderate levels. Spotify on -14, too.
Even for CD ... the loudness war is over.
In normal cases there's one mix which is mastered in different ways for different mediums. For example CD and vinyl. And for the vinyl you can't go on such hot levels as in digital.