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#1
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Loss of quality during digital copying ??
Some advice pls guys
I'm using a using a pretty good studio to record music direct to CD If I then have the songs mastered then replicated for CD sales - what are the chances of the sound quality being affected. Cheers Rob |
#2
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"groundhog" wrote in message
om Some advice pls guys I'm using a using a pretty good studio to record music direct to CD If I then have the songs mastered Mastering can change the sound quality of a recording. It probably should change it. then replicated for CD sales - what are the chances of the sound quality being affected. Depends mostly on the players you use to audition the origionals and copies on. Some players sound better with pressed CDs than CD-Rs. In modern times we call players that have trouble playing CD-Rs *defective* or *substandard*. |
#3
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"groundhog" wrote in message
om Some advice pls guys I'm using a using a pretty good studio to record music direct to CD If I then have the songs mastered Mastering can change the sound quality of a recording. It probably should change it. then replicated for CD sales - what are the chances of the sound quality being affected. Depends mostly on the players you use to audition the origionals and copies on. Some players sound better with pressed CDs than CD-Rs. In modern times we call players that have trouble playing CD-Rs *defective* or *substandard*. |
#4
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#6
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Mastering is simply delivering your audio in an appropriate form for
replication. Cut and dried. Mastering and replication should never change the sound unless you want it to. -- Doug Osborne my day job: http://www.martinsound.com/ "groundhog" wrote in message om... Some advice pls guys I'm using a using a pretty good studio to record music direct to CD If I then have the songs mastered then replicated for CD sales - what are the chances of the sound quality being affected. Cheers Rob |
#7
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Mastering is simply delivering your audio in an appropriate form for
replication. Cut and dried. Mastering and replication should never change the sound unless you want it to. -- Doug Osborne my day job: http://www.martinsound.com/ "groundhog" wrote in message om... Some advice pls guys I'm using a using a pretty good studio to record music direct to CD If I then have the songs mastered then replicated for CD sales - what are the chances of the sound quality being affected. Cheers Rob |
#8
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#9
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