Glossary
Tape Saturation — Meaning in Music Mastering
Tape saturation is an analog-inspired color that can add soft compression, harmonic warmth and high-frequency rounding.
Key takeaways
- Tape Saturation matters because it affects how a master translates.
- The term is used in BASS MASTERING reports and educational guides.
- A definition should be useful to musicians, not only engineers.
Why Tape Saturation matters
Tape saturation is an analog-inspired color that can add soft compression, harmonic warmth and high-frequency rounding. In the context of BASS MASTERING, the term helps explain a user-facing mastering or quality-control decision.
How BASS MASTERING uses the concept
BASS MASTERING may reference tape saturation in educational pages, reports or feature explanations. Public glossary pages keep the explanation high-level and avoid private DSP thresholds.
Related mastering decisions
Tape Saturation can influence tone, loudness, dynamics, stereo behavior, analog texture or final release readiness depending on the track.
FAQ
Is this definition a mastering rule?
No. It is a public explanation. The production engine uses controlled internal logic that is not exposed in glossary pages.
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