On Tue, Nov 4, 2008 at 10:57 AM, Martin Wohlleben
<martin.wohlleben(a)gmx.de> wrote:
On Mo, 2008-11-03 at 23:56 +0000, Folderol wrote:
I have quite a large collection of mp3s and ogg
gleaned from all over
the Internet (all freely licensed) that I greatly enjoy. However, they
are all recorded at completely different levels which make playing a
program of them a bit problematical.
Does anyone know of an automated way I can bring these all to a
similar listening level.
If you are using aqualung as audio player you can import your music
library and let it analyze the files. Aqualung calculates the RVA
(Relative Volume Adjustment) and stores the values in an xml-file
representing your music library. It's my favorite audio player... very
easy to use, jack aware and also supports high quality resampling. You
should give it a try.
More info about RVA at
http://aqualung.factorial.hu/manual/aqualung-doc-part_5_3.html
Best regards,
Martin
RVA is nice at the album level as it adjusts the overall level from
album to album but keeps the relative volume of songs within the album
consistent with each other. This way quiet songs stay 'quieter' while
louder songs match those on other albums.
Important to those of us who listen to complete CDs as opposed to playlists.
Cheers,
Mark