B
bloozguy
New member
I finished up recording my first CD...
Not too bad, and now I'm working on the next.
In retrospect, one thing I'm disappointed with is that the whole cd seems to be about 25% below the level of volume of most cd's, and I have to crank it up more.
Now...in recording, my levels were all set (instruments, vocals) so that they were in the amber and bordering the red.
Someone suggested I "normalize" my volumes of each song before I burn the cd's. However, in my Cakewalk book I bought, "Cakewalk Power" by Scott Garrigus...it warns that "normalize" similar to 3dB Louder feature alters things permanently and may cause clipping later. Only if additional things are done. So "normalizing" should be done only when everything is complete. But then, the author ends by saying that "normalizing" should really not be used at all.
He suggests instead in another Tip, to record initially at a good amplitude level and adjust volume by using the Velocity parameter.
What I'm confused about then is what did I do wrong, or perhaps not do? A "good" amplitude level would be checking to make sure record levels are primarily in the amber to perhaps just red. Correct? And just off my head, the Velocity parameter's limit raises only to the number 127...right?
Any tips that might help, or explanations that will clarify what I should do? Thanks...
bloozguy
Not too bad, and now I'm working on the next.
In retrospect, one thing I'm disappointed with is that the whole cd seems to be about 25% below the level of volume of most cd's, and I have to crank it up more.
Now...in recording, my levels were all set (instruments, vocals) so that they were in the amber and bordering the red.
Someone suggested I "normalize" my volumes of each song before I burn the cd's. However, in my Cakewalk book I bought, "Cakewalk Power" by Scott Garrigus...it warns that "normalize" similar to 3dB Louder feature alters things permanently and may cause clipping later. Only if additional things are done. So "normalizing" should be done only when everything is complete. But then, the author ends by saying that "normalizing" should really not be used at all.
He suggests instead in another Tip, to record initially at a good amplitude level and adjust volume by using the Velocity parameter.
What I'm confused about then is what did I do wrong, or perhaps not do? A "good" amplitude level would be checking to make sure record levels are primarily in the amber to perhaps just red. Correct? And just off my head, the Velocity parameter's limit raises only to the number 127...right?
Any tips that might help, or explanations that will clarify what I should do? Thanks...
bloozguy