Understood, but it's not really re-mastering in the traditional sense. Re-Mastering involves manipulation of the individual tracks' levels, phase, panning and effects. You're taking a finished product and overlaying effects, DEQ, etc.
Also, I use HQPlayer, an excellent player with filters, dithering, oversampling etc. It's the best sounding and capable player and digital manipulator I've found.
You are wrong here. HQPlayer is not traditional remastering I grant you, it is “remastering lite” sort to speak. But my two systems are full blown remastering systems as I mentioned earlier, I’m able to keeping both dry and wet signals and decompose the stereo signals into X-Y vectors to alter the stereo field while at the same time shaping the waveforms for spatial and spectral content. I can add reverberation, delays, measured iron and tube saturation and pan by moving things around in the stereo field so on. Not overlaying affects but actually deconstructing to the X-Y vectors and branching to make changes before regenerating the left and right stereo signals back for further processing. My systems can decompose the stereo signals in both the digital and analog domains to make separate branches to parallel processes the decomposed signals for enhancing whatever attribute that I want. This is far more complex and involved than simply “overlaying” effects on top of the mix. Perhaps you are not familiar with high-end mastering.
Since you claim to be familiar with the studio environment, you should know that it is the “mix engineer” that adjust the individual tracks and the “mastering engineer” is responsible for polishing the final mix, and rarely revert to tracking.
I have more capabilities in these two mastering systems than most world class studios. If you are at all familiar with the mastering engineers at Sterling Sounds or at the old Sony Classical Music studios in New York you would find that they use similar tools and do not go back to tracking as that is the role of the mix engineer and not the mastering engineer. Mastering engineers work with the final mix and not at the individual track level.
Check out Bob Katz‘s mastering tools and you will see a very simple mastering chain. I have all of his mastering tools and many more.
Last edited: