kidlogic wrote:
Which actually brings me to a good question if you dont mind Macc... 
What state do you like to get tunes 'to-be-mastered' in?  
As in both what file format/sample rate/bitrate/etc...  
and also as in, if you were prepping a tune yourself to be sent out, what would you do to the mixdown before sending it off?
12 kbps 24kHz mp3 please. That way whatever I do is BOUND to sound better 
 
 
24-bit, whatever sample rate you were working at (no conversion). 
I prefer no compression across it cos people 99% of the time overdo it (IMO), often with some cruddy plugin with a too-short release that leaves nasty little traces. If I see a file clipping I usually shout something like ‘you bloody idiots, what’s the fucking matter with you?’ or along those lines and develop a twitch in my left eye (a la Herbert Lom). I was going to put 

 but I do 
Back in the days where I used to have time to make music *violins*, prepping a mixdown would go something like this;
Step 1 – make it sound as good as I could
Step 2 - mix it down
 
For some types of music, no compression or mastering is really even needed. Less mastering is the best mastering. Less compression, etc.
Agreed – it should be pointed out that no matter what music, mastering is quite often MUCH less about compression than people seem to think. Very very generally speaking, I find my self doing ~0.5dB on average, if that.  Even in housey stuff, the pumping and all that shit should be done in the mix (IMHO), or rather is much better done in the mix.
What I'm getting at is that say someone sends a tune to you and you do a job for them. For all they know, you might not have done anything at all to the tune if they don't know anything about sonic frequencies and the like. I've heard nothing but good things about you and what you do, and tested some of the tunes you've done on a system to good effect. But an untrained ear won't know what to listen for on their studio monitors, to judge how it MIGHT sound on a bigger system with better bass response, etc.
To be perfectly honest, I have read that a few times and I’m not sure what you’re getting at at all 
 
All I can say is that trained ears or not, above a certain level of subtlety, pretty much anyone can listen to something and say ‘that sounds better than it used to’. 
This is particularly true when they spent bloody ages on it, have heard it 743783290487 times and are sick to death of the thing. They send it out to someone cos they have had enough, or feel they have taken it as far as it can go. Often they have walked themselves down a sonic cul-de-sac, can’t see the wood for the trees etc etc and giving it to someone else frees them from that. Then it comes back sounding better, with no additional effort/time/emotional drain, for a little money. If you love something, let it go and all that bollix.
If they insisted on testing it on a rig every time then business would be bloody slow 

 But if it can sound that much better on the same system they heard it on x amount of times, most people are willing to trust that it will sound that much better on a rig. And when they do hear it out… well, let’s just say you get nice emails from people 
Anyway, it’s impossible to tell people ‘exactly how to mix their tunes down’. The individuality of these things makes it impossible. There’s not a list of instructions you can follow for a ‘boil in the bag perfect mix every time’ 

 It has to be done on not only a producer-basis, but on a tune-by-tune basis.
This is why – and I am pretty sure that people who have come through here would verify this – I go out of my way to be as helpful and informative as I possibly can to anyone who sends work my way. It’s to the benefit of everyone involved.
