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As Zild and a couple of others have said, tracks have their own dynamics and are mastered by their producers. So when you mix a set, you shouldn't need to master your recording. Gains should be kept more or less constant throughout your set, no bullshit about starting soft and getting louder to build energy.
Normalising the recording once you are done is the only step that may need to be taken. Usually the way you'll do this with software (such as soundforge) is the average gain of the entire recording is calculated, and say it is -17db, then you normalise the recording to a standard level (I use -16db as soundforge presets recommend for music). This means that the gain for the whole recording is upped by 1db. Likewise if your recording averages -20db, the gain will be increased by 4db to -16db.
Compression is bad news. What you are doing is you are adjusting the gains depending on frequency, so that in the high end there is little if any change in gain, but the lower the frequency, the bigger the gain boost. This 'fattens' up the low end to make things louder without making the high end too loud to tolerate. In other words, you are reducing the dynamic range of the audio signal, which means you are losing fidelity. Screw that. If you really suck at EQing during a set, then do some EQing on the recording itself.
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"I played 12.30 til close at 3am at the club (Antro), following on from an Australian dj,
which seemed unusual in deepest Texas." - Judge Jules
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