
RecordingMaster
A Sarcastic Statement
I recently realized the "Normalize" Feature under the Amplify tab, and what it does. For those of you who may not know, or never bothered to try it out, apparently it amplifies the whole track (in proportion) so that the loudest waves in your given track will be as naturally loud as possible just before it starts to clip (leaving the perfect amount of headroom).
So, I've been using it somewhat, but I'm not sure if I should be using it on every single track that I record. For example, say I record a drum track, guitar, bass, keyboards, vocals, etc., and normalize every single wave on their own, then adjust individual volumes manually during mastering (as usual). After that, normalize the whole mix.
Should I do be doing this? Or only on the things that are really weak? Or just at the final step on the whole track?
Anyone who knows about this and uses it (or has), your input would be greatly appreciated. Thanks in advance.
Jay
So, I've been using it somewhat, but I'm not sure if I should be using it on every single track that I record. For example, say I record a drum track, guitar, bass, keyboards, vocals, etc., and normalize every single wave on their own, then adjust individual volumes manually during mastering (as usual). After that, normalize the whole mix.
Should I do be doing this? Or only on the things that are really weak? Or just at the final step on the whole track?
Anyone who knows about this and uses it (or has), your input would be greatly appreciated. Thanks in advance.
Jay