I wasn't actually refering to master compression or limiting. Obviously you don't want to put anything on the master track that the mastering engeineer can already do. I'm simply refering to peak volume on the master track. As long as you don't hit 0, you're not going to get any artifacts, right? There's no loss in dynamic level or quality.jloeb wrote:But they still have to work beneath digital zero, just like you do. They can't put back any dynamic range that you have removed by overcompressing the material; but they can compress it as hot as you want (and more transparently), if that's what you tell them to do. So give them room to do it, or not do it.
In any case, if mastering engineers DO like 4db below 0, it's just a simple matter of taking the master slider down to -4, if you've been mixing near 0. It's a 32bit fp operation anyway, so it shouldn't impact the signal at all. I still don't understand why giving them less bits makes it any better for the mastering engineers. Bob Katz hasn't sugggested anything like that, as far as I've read.
Only reason I'm a bit defensive is I've just been mixing an album and using "just below 0" as a reference point, and this kinda complicates things. And further more, I just don't see any logic behind it. Leave dynamic range, yes... but why let your top 3 bits go to waste? It's basically like giving them a 21bit file with a bunch of added 0s. I've never heard of a mastering engineer promoting that.