Reason 3 For Windows and Mac

The most important mastering tool of all is your own ears, so the first order of business is to give your ears as clear a picture as possible.

Don't try to master your music after a long day of mixing has given you a case of sonic fatigue. If possible, don't listen to a work for a couple of days before you start mastering it. That way, when you start mastering you are coming at your work with a fresh set of ears.

Also, think about the sound you're going for and try to find some recordings that represent it well. If you aren't sure, listen to some recordings you love in similar styles to your song.

If possible, find more than one comparison recording so you get a broader target range. Sound variations between comparison recordings are helpful because they keep the reference point general (and more attainable) as you master.

Always check your mix carefully one last time before you start mastering. Ideally, you should listen to every instrument soloed in your song from beginning to end. For a big project, you should at least check your major submixes, instrument groups, and tracks with lots of controller data.

Check your setup

No matter how good your ears are, they won't help you if your monitoring setup can't faithfully reproduce the sound coming out of Reason. Studio monitors are designed for this purpose, and though some are better than others, this is the best (and most expensive) way to go.

Home stereo speakers and receivers are far from ideal, because they usually enhance frequency response and brands vary widely in how they do it. If you have to use stereo equipment, keep all controls off or at the middle setting.

Do everything you can to minimize interference from inside and outside your sound system. Check your signal integrity from the time it leaves the Reason hardware interface until it comes out the monitors. Any signal alteration will mask the sound you want to polish, making mastering difficult or impossible.

Tip

  • Don't master with headphones. The left and right sides of your music don't ever meet or interact, so headphones cannot give you an accurate idea of how your music is going to sound on stereos, PAs, radio, and so on.

Check Your System

  • Check your computer's sound system, and make sure that all drivers are up-to-date and any system enhancements like equalizers, tone controls, and bass boosts are off.

  • Check your console settings to make sure that all hardware effects you don't intend to use are set to bypass and that equalization, level, and panning knobs are set to neutral positions.

  • Turn off your receiver loudness controls, effects, and surround decoders, and set all tone controls midway so you don't boost or cut frequencies.

  • Check your speakers: Any knobs or boost controls (often located under the grill screen) should be at minimum or neutral settings; the speakers should sit on a solid surface, equidistant from your point of reference, and away from anything that may rattle, as well as resonating objects like pianos or cases.

  • Minimize outside noise (especially constant hums from refrigerators, computers, etc.) by closing doors and windows or turning off extraneous equipment when possible.

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