Thanks again. Things are looking much better now. I embraced the
concept of not being able to predict this. Turns out I have old
screwed up things that really benefitted from revisiting them and
cleaning them up.
Marc Lavall??e wrote on Thu, Jul 25, 2013 at 04:45:48PM -0400:
Martin Cracauer <cracauer(a)cons.org> a ??crit :
Is there a way to hook up ebumeter to just an
audio file or a stream
not associated with real time? It seems to come in a jack package
only.
Thanks again
Martin
http://r128gain.sourceforge.net/
That works. Comes in the Debian ebumeter package, BTW.
But how do I translate the output to a required db or ratio
adjustment?
I have a file in front of me that was maxed out amplitude wise by
somebody else. According to lame I needed --scale 0.64 to get it not
to clip in lame (should be 3.9 db). Which, BTW was not the value it
first estimated that I would need.
ebur128 --lufs:
Integrated loudness: -4.9 LUFS
Loudness range: 5.5 LU
Integrated threshold: -13.0 LUFS
Range threshold: -25.0 LUFS
Range min: -8.6 LUFS
Range max: -3.1 LUFS
Momentary max: -1.2 LUFS
Short term max: -2.4 LUFS
I don't see that any of the value correspond with what lame needed to
not clip over a collection of different loudness clips. (means: some
clips that needed less --scale have higher numbers here and others
have lower)
I assume the ebumeter output is more for making things sound even
(between different pieces) and not directly a tool to max out
anything, is that right?
Martin
--
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Martin Cracauer <cracauer(a)cons.org>
http://www.cons.org/cracauer/