L
Logicman991
New member
My mix is very quiet. What are some things I can do to make it louder?
Ok, thanks, but i have a problem with compression i don't know how to get around. If i use compression with RMS the peaks that comes very sudden aren't going to be compressed, even if i have the attack on 0.0ms.
Could i attach a second compressor to the track and set it at peak or would a limiter do the job better?
How loud is it now and why does it need to be louder?
I'd make sure you are bringing the inputs mic and instrument signal to line level as soon as possible. If you don't get good levels early on you'll be fighting it all down the signal chain and probably adding noise as well.
Green Day on a two million dollar budget shouldn't try to replicate that loudness.i know I -- as an amateur artist -- shouldn't try to replicate that loudness,
They can't. They don't. Play Dookie at an equivalent volume to 21st Century Breakdown or American Idiot. The new records sound much worse.but I'm really just curious how big record labels make their records so loud without getting a useless quality.
There is no use for it. Any song can be as loud as the Gods if the user turns his volume knob up. If a song isn't mastered loud enough to hear on iPod buds in a noisy environment... Nobody should be doing that anyway. It is a dangerous health hazard no matter how young and rockin' you are. The consumer needs to either listen in a sensible environment or drop a modest amount of cash on heavy enclosed noise-blocking headphones. Enabling some uninformed kid to blast his ears is just not right.I just want to learn it anyway, because i think it can be quite useful:
One has nothing to do with the other. If you want to learn how to use compressors musically on individual tracks, then practice using compressors musically on individual tracks.I think if I practice to get my songs as loud as possible without lowering the quality too much, I'm eventually going to be a pro at using compression, limiting and such methods.
If you want to practice something that you will never use on your songs, why not something much more fun? Juggling? Mountain biking?I'm not saying I want to make songs that have the loudness of commercial releases, just wanna practice it.![]()
Green Day on a two million dollar budget shouldn't try to replicate that loudness etc... etc...
i can see what you're trying to say, and you have many good points. But, i still think it can be useful. What if I some day were to work for a record company and got told to decrease the dynamic range of a song? Don't you think sound engineer students are taught this?
But other than that, you're right.![]()
Yeah, broadcast limiters don't like square waves any more than we do.But when actually *on* the radio, the quieter recordings will be loudest...
..More than that, I find that on a home stereo, the quieter songs will also be the loudest.
Loud songs don't "like" being turned up. They fight the amp and speakers every step of the way. They fight your ears every step of the way. So in practical use, they end up not being all that loud because the listener keeps it down (relatively speaking). Normal songs (let's not call them quiet songs) go nice and loud before either the listener or equipment reach the breaking point. So you play them loud because you can.
And that's the real kicker in all of this. The loud discs are actually quiet.
Yet I still know several guys who somehow manage to clip the sh*t out of 32 bits.
Sorry to get off topic, but aren't they clipping the track, not the actual bus itself? I thought it was nearly impossible to overload a bus in the digital world. Or am I thinking of a separate concept?