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ZONA FRANKA
SE LLAMA SABROSO
changüí con flow
from Guantánamo, Cuba
feat Omara Portuando, Lina Zamora
feat Alex Lias, Frank Carmenate
click here for credits
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ÓSKAR LY
RUMBALÚ
salsa, latin jazz
from Colombia & U.S.A.
feat Salvador Cuevas, Nino Segarra
feat Karl Perrazo, Richie Flores
click here for credits
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KIKI VALERA
feat. Coco Freeman
VIVENCIAS EN CLAVE CUBANA
Cuban traditional son
2021 CUBADISCO® NOMINEE
click here for credits
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ÁNGEL YOS
VAMO' HACERLO
Cuban timba & salsa
from France
2018 CUBADISCO® WINNER
click here for credits
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ROBERT ARMAS y los CONQUISTADORES de la SALSA
LA TIMBA LA TRAIGO YO
Cuban timba & salsa
from Lima, Perú
click here for credits
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JOSÉ ALBERTO "EL CANARIO"
& EL SEPTETO SANTIAGUERO
NO QUIERO LLANTO
TRIBUTO A LOS COMPADRES
2015 LATIN GRAMMY® WINNER
click here for credits
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MISTER G
LOS ANIMALES
feat. Ben Gundersheimer
Bilingual children's music artist
2015 LATIN GRAMMY® WINNER
click here for credits
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LOS AMAYA
VUELVEN...LOS AMAYA!
Universal Music Spain
rumba catalana, tropical
click here for credits
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PACIFIC MAMBO ORCHESTRA
20 Piece Latin Jazz / Salsa
feat. Christian Tumalan (piano)
& Steffen Kuehn (trumpet)
2014 GRAMMY® WINNER
click here for credits
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BRIAN ANDRES & the A.C.J.C.
SAN FRANCISCO
Smokin' West Coast Latin Jazz
from the Afro-Cuban Jazz Cartel
click here to see Brian's video
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MARLOW ROSADO Y LA RIQUEÑA
RETRO
(all-star classic 70's salsa)
Bobby Cruz, Ismael Miranda, Tony Vega
L.Texidor, Marlón Fernández., K. Ceballo
2013 GRAMMY® WINNER
click here for credits
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RAÚL LARA Y SUS SONEROS
CUBANO SOY
tradicional Cuban son & rumba
2013 GRAMMY® NOMINEE
click here for credits
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M.D. (MACHITO DIFERENTE)
The Project (Deluxe)
feat. Guanabanas & Yenziel y Mike
reggaeton, urban, tropical
click here for credits
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FRANK VELÁSQUEZ
Sueño Americano
Los Ángeles, México, Honduras
banda, rancheras, música mexicana
click here for credits
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HAVANA HEAVY HITTERS
Vestido de Blanco
feat. Michel Maza, Alexander Abreu
powerhouse all-star timba project
click here for credits
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PER-OLOV KINDGREN
Distant Love
Bogotá born swedish composer
second solo album - classical guitar
click here for credits
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BRAILY
Disco Duro
salsa con timba - tropical
contemporary cuban salsa pop
click here for credits
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Michael Lazarus - audio engineer / latin music specialist / artist consultant
michael [at] latinmusicmastering [dot] com
Engineer Member of the Grammy Awards® - Producers & Engineers Wing NARAS P&E Wing
Industry Affiliations:
ASCAP registered writer & publisher
BMI registered publisher
NAMM National Association of Music Merchants
NARAS & LARAS voting member of the Grammy Awards
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Producer, Bassist, President & Co-Founder of OCHO MUSIC GROUP LLC
Bachelor of Science in Electrical Engineering (Florida Atlantic University)
Bachelor of Music (University of Miami) |
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Allow me to introduce myself through my work. For mixing inquiries and estimates, please an uncompresssed, rough mix .wav or .aif file and a few vocal and/or main instrument tracks for me to verify the recording quality. For mastering inquiries and estimates, please an uncompresssed, clean final stereo mix .wav or .aif file and I will reply with a free analysis report for your review. Designed by Iain McNeill of IMP Audio, my calibrated mastering environment and attention to detail are the finishing touches your music deserves. While I am Latino / Hispanic and my company offers comprehensive Latin Music services, I work with all styles of music. |
On stage at the 2015 Latin Grammys® (Mandalay Bay Events Center in Las Vegas)
Audio Engineer / Artist Development Consultant / Bassist MICHAEL LAZARUS
Getting your mixes ready - a handy checklist to follow before you send your files.
1) Native audio recording format
I prefer to master .wav / .aif / .aiff files in the native audio format you recorded in. So if you recorded in 24bit - 48kHz then send it like that. If you used 24bit - 96kHz then send that. If you are sending the music and vocals separate, and the music is in a different but higher bit or sample rate, then upsample the vocal tracks. Do not downsample. Always send the highest resolution possible.
2) Check your vocal tracks
Did you solo and check all your vocal tracks for lip noise, breathing and other extraneous sounds? It's easy to fix all that without having to pay me to do it.
3) Leave some headroom
Check that your signals / waveform level isn't jacked up to the rails. It's always a good practice to leave AT LEAST 3dB of headroom for the mastering engineer. So the loudest part in your mix should peak at no more than -3db on your master bus. When you are bouncing your 2 track mix in Protools make sure your bounce doesn't have any overbearing compression or limitier plugins activated (be tasty). Just send a clean final mix.
4) Reference tracks are always a good idea
Sending tracks / music from artists that have the sound you are looking for, or have a similar vibe to your music, is a very efficient way to provide me with some direction.
5) Use consistent naming and timing for your stems
If you send the mixes broken out in stems, for example the music and the vocals on separate stereo tracks, then check your filenames so that they match and are clear to understand. Also verify that each stem track is CONSOLIDATED so that they start at exactly the same time when I drop it into my workstation. Make sure that all tracks start at 0 (zero) and that they line up properly in time.
What is mastering?
Mastering, a form of audio post-production, is the process of preparing and transferring recorded audio from a source containing the final mix to a data storage device (the master) -- the source from which all copies will be pressed, duplicated or replicated.
Measurements are completed to determine the current state of the mix so that, typically, the mastering engineer can apply shine, polish, punch, depth and definition to the stereo image and overall clarity to the track. Corrective equalization and dynamic enhancement may also be applied in order to improve upon sound translation on ALL playback systems (very important). While these are subjective terms, the art of the process involves critical listening in order to make objective and scientific decisions about the sound quality. Therefore it can not be successfully achieved without the presence of a mastering engineer (an actual human being).
The mastering process continues to resist automation. There are software tools available to facilitate this but results still depend upon the accuracy of speaker monitors, and also critical, completing the work in an acoustically calibrated environment. If the process takes place in an environment that is NOT acoustically calibrated, then the music will sound differently in different environments and rooms. That's just physics.
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