Dave Phillips wrote: > Short answer: Yes, you should employ JAMin and work at mastering your > work before printing to disc. > > Longer response: Learn by doing. JAMin isn't a terribly difficult app to > learn, but learning exacty what doses of which process to utilize, that > takes some time and experimentation. For example, compression was > something of a black art to me, but I've learned much more about it by > playing around with JAMin's excellent tools. Ok, I played around with jamin and read a bit here and there [1], but if possible it's now even blacker magic to me. If anyone would give a practical example of what I'm missing, I uploaded one of the songs to http://atte.dk/download/holde_pkt.ogg. It seems like jamin can save it's settings to a .jam file, so if someone would be so super-kind and mess around with jamin's settings (making my song sound like a dream :-)), post the .jam file *and* (most importantly) explain the reasoning behind the decisions that went into that .jam, I think I can start to understand a little bit... I hope I'm not sounding like trying to get a master for free here, but I'm really eager to learn. If nobody wants to waste their time on this, I understand... [1] http://jamin.sourceforge.net/en/loudness.html http://www.digido.com/bob-katz/cd-mastering.html -- peace, love & harmony Atte http://atte.dk | http://myspace.com/attejensen http://anagrammer.dk | http://modlys.dk _______________________________________________ Linux-audio-user mailing list Linux-audio-user@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx http://lists.linuxaudio.org/mailman/listinfo/linux-audio-user