J
jaybriggs84
New member
I'm recording a project with my friend and he mentioned about certain parts of the song being different volumes. What ways are there to preform this other than a write automation?
NYMorningstar said:A sure way to kill your song is to normalize. Instead, you want to look at the project and ask yourself why you think it needs to be normalized and then fix it.
studiomaster said:Paul, do you use the normalizer on the Master bus as insert? Will it be better if I use Wavelab to normalize the entire .wav file instead?
Bad advice, NYMorningstar has it right.bdemenil said:It's a very good idea to normailize any final mix.
NYMorningstar said:It's not a good idea to normalize a final mix especially if you are going to have it mastered. If you're using it to regulate the volumes of your whole album you should stop and use your own ears. Normalizing is an unnecessary step that doesn't change the signal to noise ratio and adds quantization distortion.
When you're in a rush and the quality of the audio isn't that important (radio ads, background music for corporate events etc.).TelePaul said:so when would you use it? I do it when ive finsihed mixing the entire track.
It just turns it up. But it generally does so by permanently processing the file (unless you do it to a copy).TelePaul said:what exactly does it do then? haha seems funny, when Im in a rush id add a step.
A normaliser scans the source, finds the loudest peak and raises the overall volume until that loudest part reaches a predtermined level (often 0dB). So everything gets increased by that amount (including the noise floor).TelePaul said:what exactly does it do then? haha seems funny, when Im in a rush id add a step.
"Performing extra math on digital audio only degrades the quality. It's a misguided practice left over from the days of 8 bit samplers ...."
Normalizing - used in a reasonable manner - does not distort audio. It applies a very simple calculation which is basically identical to pushing up the master volume fader to the highest possible level without having any part of the song clip. I can't think of another way of doing this which is less destructive (maybe pushing up the faders on individual tracks prior to mixdown - but negligible difference).normalization is a particularly destructive way of doing that compared with other ways of raising volume.