How much headroom do you leave on your final master?

  • Thread starter Thread starter Soem
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Soem

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Curious about this. Please also write down your style (or post soundcloud link).
 
3-6db all styles - in some cases it might be as much as 20db - i.e. if I am mixing for high dynamic contrast - any style
 
A shitload!
I always start at 0db and keep pulling the volumes down the more instruments I add and the more I mix em all into the mix. I usually end up having them all ranging from -20 to -10.
Better have enough headroom then too little or end up competing in the loudness wars...

Styles I'm concentrating on now are hiphop, (boombap or oldskool, https://www.futureproducers.com/forums/music-genres/rap-hip-hop-r-b/da-good-old-shit-409052/ <-- this stuff) and progressive techouse/minimal .
I have a soundcloud clip online but that's merely for my friends to have something online. I still end up making music for the fun of it and jamming for hours, ending up with 8 bars and no recordings. When I finish my study, I'll make a change to that. The soundclip is not nearly something I'd call my style or " good ". Too much of a perfectionist tbh. Also, I keep learning so much stuff every day, so sound quality get's better and better by the day.
 
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-6db as said before. I produce drum and bass, dubstep and industrial.
 
Before mastering:
  • in 16 bits any maximal none clipping peak in the -6 to 0 dBFS range is OK
  • in 24 bits any maximal none clipping peak in the -18 to 0 dBFS range is OK
  • in 32 bits float any peak value is OK
After mastering:
  • -0.3 dBFS (true peak) is usually safe for both CD and 320 kbps mp3.
  • -1 dBFS (true peak) is OK for iTunes (aac) and 256 kbps mp3.
  • -2 dBFS (true peak) is usually OK for lower bit rate mp3.
 
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I land somewhere around -3 to -6 just like bandcoach said.
 
At first, I misread your question. Here is my re-edited response.

Mixing at -12 dB. All genres & styles

Final Master at -3dB
 
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The guy I mix for, he does a lot of different stuff, some stuff super high energy some more mellow. when i finish the mix the amount of headroom left, at least for me, is dependent on the track. slower, softer tracks generally have less with me while I leave a lot of space in fast, intense, or particularly bass heavy tracks.
 
Always always always leave -6db. The more headroom, the merrier. Crank up that maximizer.
 
well i usually make it till the meters almost wont move...almost! that would be bout -10 RMS or -0.0 PEAK ...headroom is few dbs but yes what we gotta achiv is the track almost not making the meters move! ! ! ! you can squash it but having some dynamic range is essencial yeah.
 
If meters don't move, that means you have zero dynamics... almost no dynamics in your case.

Depends on the type of meter and its ballistics -- it's possible to have a meter which measures the effects of
several peaks before having a chance to "settle" into the dips (especially relevant for "modeled" meters).

-Ki
Salem Beats
 
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I try to stay between -6 to -9. But, I was taught, if it sounds good; it's good.

Sometimes it sounds perfect to you, but it still shows that it's clipping.
 
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