|
Steal the track to do what? Upload it to beatport and if they're really lucky make a couple of dollars? Yeah, that's much better than actually doing the mastering work and getting a guaranteed couple of dollars.
As Inner Sanctum said, you have the original project files - you can split the audio into individual tracks to prove you have the original. If someone steals a song off you, they can't do that.
For mastering you wouldn't send an mp3 file - mp3s will discard parts of the sound. Send a good quality WAV or AIFF file.
You can leave master channel effects on if they are "creative" rather than "corrective", or just there to push the average level up. The mastering process will take care of the corrective and loudness-maximizing processes. Your song shouldn't clip anywhere (that is, it shouldn't hit 0 dB at any point), because mastering can't undo this damage.
Lastly, if your song doesn't sound incredible before going to mastering, don't expect it to come back sounding incredible. Mastering isn't going to fix bad sound choices, levelling decisions, untamed resonant frequencies on individual sounds, reverbs with too much low end, etc etc etc. (well, not without affecting other instruments).
|