Z
Zeppe
New member
should i just normalize the final mix stereo interleaved file? or normalized each track seperately?...
=]
Forgot about this kid?
should i just normalize the final mix stereo interleaved file? or normalized each track seperately?...
=]
T
Let's say you have a track, and the noise is about 30/40 dB below the average signal level, all the time. If you normalize it to 0dBFS, it will still be 30/40dB below the average signal level, all the time.
Explain this? You raise your average level and it raises your noise floor. Its physics man.
I was wondering how long that would take. lol, Might be a newbie here but definitely not in the audio world.
Just bringing your peaks to 0db is not mastering. That is the point your not getting.
Yes the song is louder than it was but is that all you think a mastering engineer does? A song correctly mastered will sparkle. You cannot achieve this by simply normalizing a track.
Your looking to much into that one analog gain stage of a very high quality piece of equipment.
A professional mastering job (and what I'm talking about here is NOT mastering, but merely just making a track louder, closer to a commercial CD)
However, it will also turn up the signal, and sound the same.
If somebody were to listen to the song, and it was a few dB quieter because it wasn't normalised, they'd probably turn up their speakers. Same thing isn't it?
If anything, compression and limiting is worse for noise than normalization.
Let's say you have a track, and the noise is about 30/40 dB below the average signal level, all the time. If you normalize it to 0dBFS, it will still be 30/40dB below the average signal level, all the time.
If you limit the recording and get roughly 10dB of gain reduction and then turn up your make up gain by 10dB, the noise will increase by 10dB when there is no signal.
Zeppe, normalizing does not increase the noise any more than it increases the signal level, so your SNR is the same before and after normalizing. There's no cumulative noise effect. I'm not quite sure where you are getting that from.
Yes - "it brings the noise floor up" - but only along with the signal itself... the SNR remains the same... reduce the gain again and you end up with exactly the same as what you started with.
Any kind of compression will actually 'destructively' increase the noise floor.
Zeppe, normalizing does not increase the noise any more than it increases the signal level, so your SNR is the same before and after normalizing. There's no cumulative noise effect. I'm not quite sure where you are getting that from.
-Normalizing is no where near the same thing as mastering and should not even be uttered in the same breath.
Thank you, I hate normalization even more after today.
Thank you, I hate normalization even more after today.
Phillbagg - Take it easy buddy.