Har-Bal: Worlds first visual mastering equalizer

Har-Bal LogoHow does your music sound compared to your favorite commercial recordings?

Don't let your music leave your studio without correcting the spectral balance through Har-Bal, the world's first visual mastering equalizer.

Har-Bal has caused a paradigm shift in the recording industry and is an award winning outstanding technical achievement.

This superior method of EQ'ing and harmonic balancing gives Har-Bal it's distinction as the premiere spectrum analyzer for the most important step in the CD mastering process. It truly separates an amateur recording from a professional recording and removes the need to test your CD's on different systems and environments.

In addition, unlike a typical digital equalizer, Har-Bal leaves the initial volume level unchanged even after performing spectral correction thanks to its "loudness compensation" technology.

Har-Bal allows you to easily tidy up the sound quality of mastered or un-mastered recordings while preserving the original intent of the producer and/or recording engineer.

  Click to view Video Demonstration / Tutorial

 
Browse this website in:

What the Pro's are Saying

"(Har-Bal is) a cleverly implemented tool that fixes EQ problems with astonishing speed and precision...(it's) is a welcome, important, well-designed program for those who believe mastering has much more to do with subtle response touch-ups than squashed dynamics. Very cool"

- Craig Anderton, EQ Magazine Jan 2004

BUY NOW!

Har-Bal version 2.3 can be purchased and downloaded immediately through RegNet by following this link.

Mastering Tutorial

Mastering TutorialThe following is a mastering tutorial explaining many tips, tricks and audio mastering secrets. There are a number of methods used to accomplish harmonic balancing or spectral correction. Your tracks will sound their best when they are first processed in Har-Bal before any digital eq or multiband compression/limiting is applied.

Read More...

Website Poll

Rate our new Website
 

FAQ's

Is the registered copy 24 bit 96K?
Har-Bal is not bit rate specific, provided that your hardware and windows MME drivers support 96kHz Har-Bal will also.