Audio Mastering Fundamentals: Preparing Mixes for Distribution
Mastering is the final creative step before audio is distributed — a process of subtle refinement that ensures a mix translates well across all playback systems. Understanding the fundamentals prevents over-processing.
Key Takeaways
- Mastering serves four purposes:
- Before touching any controls, listen to the entire mix.
- After mastering, check on multiple systems: studio monitors, headphones, car stereo, laptop speakers, and phone speaker.
- ## Critical Listening Checks After mastering, check on multiple systems: studio monitors, headphones, car stereo, laptop speakers, and phone speaker.
- Never process the low end (below 200 Hz) in the side channel — bass should remain centered.
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What Mastering Does
Mastering serves four purposes:
- Tonal balance — Ensure the frequency spectrum is balanced (not too bass-heavy, not too bright)
- Dynamic consistency — Even out the overall dynamics so quiet and loud passages are appropriately balanced
- Loudness — Bring the level to the target loudness standard for the delivery platform
- Translation — Ensure the audio sounds good on every playback system: earbuds, car speakers, laptop speakers, studio monitors
The Mastering Signal Chain
Step 1: Reference Listening
Before touching any controls, listen to the entire mix. Compare against 2-3 reference tracks in the same genre that are professionally mastered. Note specific differences: 'the low end feels thinner than the reference,' 'the vocals feel recessed compared to the reference.'
Step 2: EQ
Make broad, gentle adjustments (1-2 dB). Mastering EQ is about overall tonal balance, not surgical corrections (those belong in mixing). Common moves: high-pass at 20-30 Hz to remove subsonic content, gentle shelf boosts for 'air' above 10 kHz, gentle cuts in muddy regions (200-400 Hz).
Step 3: Compression
Glue compression with a slow attack (30+ ms), slow release (200+ ms), low ratio (1.5:1 to 2:1), and 1-3 dB of gain reduction. This subtly bonds the elements of the mix together without squashing transients.
Step 4: Stereo Enhancement
If the mix feels narrow, subtle mid-side EQ can widen the stereo image. Boost the side channel above 5 kHz for a sense of width. Never process the low end (below 200 Hz) in the side channel — bass should remain centered.
Step 5: Limiting
The final limiter sets the output ceiling (typically -1 dBTP) and brings the loudness to the target LUFS. Use 2-4 dB of limiting maximum. If more is needed, the mix is too quiet and should be turned up before the limiter.
Critical Listening Checks
After mastering, check on multiple systems: studio monitors, headphones, car stereo, laptop speakers, and phone speaker. If the bass disappears on small speakers, the low-end balance needs adjustment. If high frequencies are fatiguing on headphones, the top end is too aggressive.