Music Production/How to Master Your Music in 5 Simple Steps
How to Master Your Music in 5 Simple Steps

How to Master Your Music in 5 Simple Steps

In The Mix22 min30 juin 2018
7 chapitres
  • Introduction and Overview(0'001'45)
    Mastering is the final step for a song before releasing it into the world, but it's often misunderstood by beginners—either oversimplified or overcomplicated.
    Professional mastering engineers have extensive experience, the right equipment, and trained ears to finish songs optimally. However, these five steps will help those without access to professional services.
    • Step 1: Setting an aim for the project • Step 2: Final check and adding fades • Step 3: Adjusting tonal balance with frequency analysis • Step 4: Adding sweetening or creative effects • Step 5: Getting the song appropriately loud
    The tutorial uses headphones for demonstration purposes, but studio monitors and headphones are recommended for actual mastering work to hear all frequencies properly.
  • Step 1: Setting Your Mastering Aim(1'453'07)
    Determine where your song will be distributed and how you want it to sound, as the mastering approach changes depending on the target platform or medium.
    The goal is to have the song translate well across all systems—from iPod earbuds to large speakers—so it sounds good everywhere.
    Ensure the song is loud enough without pushing it excessively, as this will be addressed in more detail during the loudness step.
    Mastering is a creative and musical process, not just technical. Getting inspired and mentally prepared helps ensure the best result for your song.
  • Step 2: Final Check and Adding Fades(3'075'05)
    Create automation clips on the master channel to add gentle fades at the song's beginning and end, ensuring there are no clicks or pops.
    Listen to the entire song from start to finish without touching anything—no volume changes, EQ adjustments, or any tweaks—to identify any issues.
    • Listen for clicks, pops, hiss, or problematic consonants • Check for any clipping or distortion from plugins • Ensure there are no sloppy edits or mistakes in the song
    Verify that the volume and balance of all elements remain consistent throughout the song. If you feel the urge to adjust volume or skip sections, the issue should be fixed in the mixing stage, not mastering.
  • Step 3: Adjusting Tonal Balance(5'059'47)
    Ensure your mix translates well across all playback systems because what sounds good on large speakers may not work on headphones or smaller systems.
    Compare your mix to professional reference tracks to identify if frequencies are balanced correctly—whether there's too much bass, insufficient mid-range, or other imbalances.
    • iZotope Tonal Balance Control: Shows relative energy across frequency ranges with acceptable limits based on commercial releases • SPAN: Free frequency analyzer for comparing your mix to professional mixes • Use your ears: Compare listening to reference tracks rather than relying solely on visual tools
    Make subtle broad-stroke EQ adjustments of about 1dB or less. Avoid making many narrow cuts and boosts, as this typically indicates mixing issues that should be addressed in the mixing stage. A high-pass filter around 20Hz removes unnecessary low-end rumble that can't be heard on most consumer devices.
  • Step 4: Adding Creative Effects(9'4714'14)
    Test various effects like saturation, harmonic excitement, and compression, but remain critical about whether they actually improve the mix.
    Adding subtle tube saturation or harmonic excitement can enhance the mix, but only use these if they genuinely improve the sound. Be honest about the results.
    • Multiband compression or buss compression can control dynamic range or add warmth • Use a high-pass filter on the compressor to prevent the kick from being compressed, which can kill punch • Set a fast release time so the compression recovers between transients and doesn't over-compress the song
    Experiment with presets and adjust parameters to understand what each dial does. Over time and many mastering sessions, you'll develop skills and find sweet spots for using these tools effectively.
  • Step 5: Achieving Appropriate Loudness(14'1420'33)
    Online streaming platforms loudness normalize songs to approximately minus 14 LUFS, so pushing your song louder just for loudness is unnecessary anymore.
    Use an LUFS loudness meter like Yulin to measure integrated loudness across the entire song. RMS and peak loudness are no longer relevant for streaming platforms.
    • Use a mastering limiter with a ceiling set to no higher than minus 1dB to prevent conversion artifacts • Lower the threshold until the integrated loudness sits around minus 14 LUFS • Allow the loudest sections to push slightly higher while maintaining quieter sections for dynamic balance
    Choose limiting that sounds best for your song while maintaining breathing dynamics. Extremely loud masters often introduce distortion and lose dynamic punch, while the streaming normalization means all songs play back at similar loudness anyway.
  • Exporting and Final Verification(20'3322'06)
    Select the song region for export, ensure all master effects are enabled, and export as a WAV file with high quality settings.
    Set WAV bit depth to 24-bit or check streaming platform requirements, as specifications may vary. Most platforms currently accept 24-bit WAV files.
    • Listen to the final mastered file and verify you're happy with the sound • Import the file into a new project and check the loudness meter again • Ensure nothing peaks above minus 0.1dB and that the limiter functioned properly
    Check for any distortion artifacts, pops, clicks, or timing issues that may have occurred during export. These are rare but important to catch before distribution.