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blog:masteringschool

Going to AVP school for mastering learning purpose ?

Mastering has two faces as a job:

  • The artistic peer review act, which is to assess client's mix moves and either correct on master or suggest mixing adjustments.
  • The industrial production act, which is to prepare and adjust sound material for its diffusion on final media (platform, CD, Vinyl,…).

A mastering engineer is a sharply skilled and experienced pair of ears who's responsible for those final touches that make impact. Sitting in a treated control room which he perfectly knows the sound of, he might be using snake-oil level analog/niche processings for that little marketing edge we all love to brag about, but whatever the gear, his mission is to provide the best sound finishing craftmanship to a sound producer.

Unfortunately, 80% of the learning part is acquiring those perception skills to fill the job, and it takes a lot of practice. Which goes far beyond the extremely limited session time and music exposure happening during a school course.

The most valuable things you do get by going to a school are (1) building an interesting network of people in the field which is a strong asset in the long time, and (2) get yourself some diploma credit for your resume. (1) can be extremely valuable and depending on school, (2) might open doors too.

blog/masteringschool.txt · Last modified: 2024/03/13 11:53 by wadmin