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honestly you are better off paying a professional to master your rendered mix. they will have way more experience and probably better equipment to master your music.
develop your skills as a mixer first. learn what frequencies your speakers emphasize more on (since im sure they're not flat response monitors) and then learn how to compensate for it in the mix. you really need a fresh set of ears when it comes to mixing, or at least take a break from it for a couple days and come back to it.
look up the basics of EQing, doing frequency sweeps, cutting highs and lows accordingly, and fundamental frequencies. you shouldn't even touch a compressor/limiter if you don't know what you're doing because 90% of the time you're just going to kill any dynamics in your mix. there's so many threads on how to mix..but there is no SET way to mix. the best way to start developing an ear for a good mix is to try to mimic the tonality in your favorite artist's track (somebody that had their song mixed right please).
oh yeah and u gotta start spelling probably right man. tired of seeing 'proberly' lol
sorry man, ahah, i tried my best to spell properly, im more of a slang, and thanks for telling me some of the options on how mixing is, and bout the fresh ear, i def need some of those xP
mastering is no easy task ....although ....when i attempt to do it i use waves c4 multi band compressor and waves L2 limiter...this is assuming your track is eq'd properly before hand ....and clipping is a no no .... some people over use the plugs and squash the shit outta there mixes...so be careful.