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Signal Processing
DSP is applied nondestructively and in real time to individual tracks
in a playlist, so it does not affect the original audio files recorded
on the hard disk. Also, deleting a track from a playlist does not delete
its parent audio file from the hard disk. However, deleting will cause
all of your DSP settings to be lost for that track. According to Alesis,
Version 2.0 software for MasterLink allows backing up tracks in a playlist
backup/restore mode. To avoid losing work that may be needed if and when
an indecisive client decides to reinstate a deleted track, youll
need to add the track to an alternative playlista holding tank for
ideas, if you willand manually re-enter DSP settings before you
delete the track from its original playlist. V. 2.0 software is said to
allow copying and pasting of DSP settings between tracks on different
playlists.
DSP is applied to tracks in six blocks arranged in the following, immutable
order: track gain, compressor, parametric EQ, limiter, track fades and
normalizer. Individual DSP blocks can be toggled on/off independently.
My only complaint is that, for most applications, I would rather have
EQ come before compression so that applied boost doesnt undo dynamic
range adjustments. That said, MasterLinks dynamics processing and
EQ sound downright superb, and the range and incremental control of parameter
values will satisfy even the most finicky mastering engineer.
MasterLinks compressor is clean and extremely transparent. Even
the hard knee mode is relatively free of amplitude modulation artifacts.
Simply put, this is one of the best digital stereo program compressors
Ive heard.
The compressor offers threshold, ratio, makeup gain, attack, release,
key (channel master), knee (choice of hard and four soft knee modes),
detect (peak or RMS) and meter parameters. The latter offers six combinations
of input/output/gain reduction metering.
Unfortunately, the compressors makeup gain can only boost and not
attenuate, and the downstream EQ block has no output gain control. Whenever
EQ boost clips the downstream limiter, you must attenuate levels in the
track gain blocknecessitating a resetting of the compressors
threshold. Its a minor hassle.
MasterLinks sweet-sounding EQ block offers both parametric and low/high
shelving curves. On the downside, there are only three bands and they
dont have independent bypasses. But happily, all three bands cover
20.22 to 20.22k Hz in very fine steps, and boost/cut is adjustable in
exacting 0.25dB increments. Q is adjustable from 0.1 to 18, making notch
filtering and broad tonal shaping a snap.
MasterLinks look-ahead peak limiter is reminiscent of the Waves
L1 in that it combines a brick-wall, :1 limiter with a maximizer
function for setting your output ceiling. MasterLinks
limiter sounds outstanding. Its extremely transparent and can really
beef up a mix.
Fade-in and -out times can be adjusted for each track in 10ms or 1-second
increments. Linear fade, normal logarithmic and inverse log shapes are
offered, and they all sound very smooth.
MasterLink also offers a real-time (vs. file-based) normalizer, allowing
changes to be made after upstream signal processing settings are altered.
On my wish list for future software updates: a global bypass for all DSP,
and multipoint I/O metering before/after each DSP module (to safeguard
against potential clipping at various points along the audio path). Notably,
the compressor block already provides such metering.
Burn, Baby, Burn
After youre finished tweaking the EQ, compression and other settings,
signal processing is written to each track in a manner similar to bouncing
to disk in a DAW. The rendered playlist is recorded to a reserved,
invisible area of the hard disk so that it can be burned to
CD multiple times without the need to re-render. Rendering only occurs
with Red Book CDsMasterLink does not render in high-definition 24/96
mode. The time display still shows elapsed/remaining time for a single
track or the entire playlist while the CD is being burned, and the current
track number also changes to reflect your progress.
MasterLink can read and write both Red Book (16-bit, 44.1kHz) CDs and
proprietary CD24 CDs. CD24 discs can be written to and played back at
any of the 12 resolutions that the hard disk can record at, and is not
limited to just 24-bit/96kHz data. Only disk-at-once mode is supported.
When you write high-resolution audio to a Red Book CD in MasterLink, the
audio is automatically noise-shaped and/or sample-rate converted down
to 16-bit, 44.1 kHz on its way to CD. However, the high-res audio files
on the hard drive remain unchanged. CD24 discs are played back by MasterLink
at their original sample rate and word length.
MasterLink writes Red Book CDs at 4x speed and CD24 discs at 2x speed
onto standard CD-R blanks. A 650MB disc will hold a maximum of 19 minutes
of 24/96 audio, and the recording process takes about 36 minutes.
File Exchange
Alert readers will notice that MasterLink has no SCSI connectors. How
does MasterLink exchange data with DAWs?
MasterLinks CD24 mode records .AIFF sound files in an ISO-9660 CD-ROM
disc format along with proprietary information, making the CD24 discs
compatible with CD-R and CD-ROM drives. Most computer-based audio editing
programs can recognize .AIFF files, raising the possibility of opening
a CD24 disc in a DAW to perform further editing. However, Macs cannot
recognize the file type and creator info on CD24 discs made with MasterLinks
V. 1.0 software. (This is not an issue with PCs.) This should be corrected
with the release of V. 2.0 software, and CD24 discs should be fully compatible
with Macs. Both Windows and UNIX operating systems are also currently
supported.
How about going in the other direction, from DAW to MasterLink? MasterLink
can only recognize Red Book audio or CD24 discs; it cannot read .AIFF
files created in a DAW. To transfer high-resolution audio or anything
other than Red Book audio files from a DAW into MasterLink, you must play
the DAWs audio files in real time and recordpreferably via
digital I/Oto MasterLinks internal hard drive. MasterLink
can also copy individual tracks, one at a time, from Red Book CDs to its
hard drive. V. 2.0 software will reportedly be able to copy all CD tracks
at once.
Conclusions
MasterLink provides an enormous yet cost-effective upgrade to outdated
DAT decks and CD burners in a portable, all-in-one package. The built-in
DSP sounds so good, many users will choose to use it in lieu of their
outboard gear and DAW plug-ins. Top-notch sound quality, ultrafine parameter
control, support of numerous high-resolution formats, backwards compatibility
and the robust error correction of the CD-ROM format give MasterLink a
strong shot at establishing a new industry standard for master delivery
and archiving. File exchange issues should be resolved with the release
of V. 2.0 software, leaving the analog front-ends limited headroom
as the only major barrier to full professional acceptance. If you can
work around that, MasterLink is a slam dunk.
Alesis, 1633 26th St., Santa Monica, CA 90404; 800/5ALESIS; www.alesis.com.
Michael Cooper
is the owner of Michael Cooper Recording, located outside the small resort
town of Sisters at the base of the Oregon Cascades.
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Reprinted with permission from Mix Magazine, June, 2000
© 2000, Intertec Publishing, A Primedia Company All Rights Reserved
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