On Monday 31 October 2005 17:01, Cesare wrote:
The definition of 'normalization' in the
description of the software
linked below is, IMHO, too vague. And normalization is not enough for
your purpose.
I agree, that's why I am thinking that I need _average_ meters
To my understanding, normalization means finding the
maxpeak level of
the entire track and scale the signal to use the highest possible level
without having distortion (when there's the maximum peak).
I suggest that you *just need to trust your ears*, listening to the
first track and the adjusting the volume of the second according to your
perception. A compressor/limiter would help with the peaks.
Try this instead:
http://jamin.sourceforge.net/
Nice info, I remastered the song with this info, thanks
or just apply a compressor before the output of your
audio software of
choice.
c.
www.cesaremarilungo.com
Andrew Lewis wrote:
>Marcos Guglielmetti wrote:
>>As instance, suppose I want to master my song at a similar RMS level as
>>another audio file has.
>>What should I use?
>
>http://www1.cs.columbia.edu/~cvaill/normalize/
>
>-Drew
--
Marcos Guglielmetti
Coordinador del desarrollo de Musix GNU+Linux (
www.musix.org.ar)
fecha: sáb nov 12 21:05:01 CET 2005
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