When it comes to MASTERING it might be the first and most important step for the artist or label to be finding the right engineer for the job. As product manager and label owner myself i was often selecting the mastering house on the music style i thought they can do best - and that was often a complex choice. Then i got dragged deep into professional mastering myself, attending all sessions, organizing the best vinyl cuts and pressing plants, watching, learning - and finally working as a freelance engineer myself! Now, almost 10 years later, having developed my own studio to a state-of-the-art audiophile analog mastering facility, most of the time i'm mastering and producing club music, like drum&bass, house, nu-jazz, dub, electronica and hiphop, but i find myself more often doing jobs for the more acoustic oriented styles of jazz, folk and rock music. My personal goal is to put the bass back in music and still have a crisp topend and defined mids - you can't do that well with digital code, in the end digital limiting is the death blow - hence my favour for the best analog gear available. I’m constantly experimenting with various hardware and signal/power/digital-cables for a coherent, complementing system and am happy to have assembled some incredibly sounding analog gear as my mastering chain to fit my very demanding criteria of sound that is transparent, detailed & punchy but also warm, organic, 3D’ish & loud ! myspace