
crawdad
Dammit, Jim, Shut Up!
I, for one, am getting tired of the louder CD wars. You know--you look at the waveform and it looks like a solid black line! Whats the point anyway? When the music loses all its dynamics from getting squeezed to theoretical zero, I think it loses something.
I say all this because I tried to approach this super loud thing, but I felt like the mixes got altered in the process. When I did add final limiting but just tamed the transients, the mixes sounded much fresher and more dynamic to me. In the end, mastering a whole album, I ended up turning mixes down a bit to achieve a balance between 12 songs.
Yes, I had to turn the CD up SLIGHTLY, but in every system, it sounded cleaner and more pure. I felt like the line amps in most equipment liked seeing a level that was not so maxed out. I don't know the technical side, but my ears preferred the less limited mixes.
Opinions? Views? Ideas? Where is the best compomise between giving the mix volume and preserving the mix itself?
I say all this because I tried to approach this super loud thing, but I felt like the mixes got altered in the process. When I did add final limiting but just tamed the transients, the mixes sounded much fresher and more dynamic to me. In the end, mastering a whole album, I ended up turning mixes down a bit to achieve a balance between 12 songs.
Yes, I had to turn the CD up SLIGHTLY, but in every system, it sounded cleaner and more pure. I felt like the line amps in most equipment liked seeing a level that was not so maxed out. I don't know the technical side, but my ears preferred the less limited mixes.
Opinions? Views? Ideas? Where is the best compomise between giving the mix volume and preserving the mix itself?