Once a song has been mixed, a mastering engineer will take the final bounce of the track and apply whatever processing they deem necessary to put the final touches on a song. This tends to include EQ, compression and limiting especially.
An easy way to differentiate mixing from mastering is that mixing involves the processing of all the different elements of the song and mastering involves processing the entire track.
Typically, mastering is a less elaborate process than mixing as you rarely want to over-do it. When mastering a song any extreme processing can fundamentally change the track in major ways.
In the video below (Mix with the Masters, 2022), engineer Chris Gehringer masters Lorde’s ‘Solar Power’ (2021).
In this video, we can see that he has done very minimal processing involving a slight boost around 100hz and about 2.5dB of limiting. While it’s important to keep in mind that the song was mixed by a professional mixing engineer which makes the job a lot easier at the mastering stage, it still serves as an example of how delicate the mastering process can be.
While it can seem that mastering is an easy process due to how little can be involved at times, this is misleading as the delicate nature of mastering elicits a need for careful listening and decision making that can be overwhelming for many not accustomed to it.
This is why AI mastering tools such as Izotope Ozone have gained so much popularity recently. These plugins analyse the frequency spectrum, dynamic content and stereo image of a track and make adjustments based on industry standards, with a variety of presets and an ability to go in and change anything you don’t like. Increasingly, this is looking to be a big part of the future of mastering.
One one hand, this has given those without the resources or experience the ability to make more professional sounding music that can compete with an industry that has an immense barrier to entry. In my books, that is always a positive as I firmly believe music should be for everyone and not just those with the resources and finances to create without restrictions.
On the other hand, this poses a threat to the art form of mastering as AI can not make the creative decisions that are unique to an individual song and instead attempt to replicate what is already out there. AI mastering also threatens mastering engineers who are not already well established and financially successful the most as the biggest market for these tools are those who would otherwise be paying lower prices for engineers who are up and coming.
Many mixing engineers take issue with AI mastering for these reasons, as well as some (Wright, 2025) arguing that AI will “never replace the human touch” and that “passion isn’t something that can be faked or emulated”.
References:
Lorde (2021) ‘Solar Power’, Solar Power. Available at: https://open.spotify.com/track/7s2kWabRM60W9I61HpKg8C?si=5c055a963a654420 (Accessed: 31st August 2025).
Mix with the Masters (2022) Mastering ‘Solar Power’ by Lorde with Chris Gehringer. May 12th. Available at: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sDi9Bvz2wgE (Accessed: 31st August 2025).
Wright, A. (2025) ‘For the Love of Sound: Why You Should Choose Human Mastering Over AI Tools’, AlexanderWright, 15th January. Available at: https://alexanderwright.com/blog/human-mastering-over-ai.