Glossary
Inter-Sample Peak — Meaning in Music Mastering
An inter-sample peak is a reconstructed peak that can exceed the visible sample peak after conversion or oversampling.
Key takeaways
- Inter-Sample Peak 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 Inter-Sample Peak matters
An inter-sample peak is a reconstructed peak that can exceed the visible sample peak after conversion or oversampling. 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 inter-sample peak in educational pages, reports or feature explanations. Public glossary pages keep the explanation high-level and avoid private DSP thresholds.
Related mastering decisions
Inter-Sample Peak 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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