V
vinyldinosaur
New member
I've started recording some sound effects that I intend to use for sampling, to study sound design and synthesis.
What are actually the good practices for saving samples?
I can easily observe that .wav should be the file format.
But what I'm perhaps the most concerned about is the volume level; I must admit that the concept of volume still confuses me in music technology, and I'm looking for a good book on all this "boring but necessary stuff that you don't learn just through serendipitous fun". But now I'd just want to get on with the project anyway, I'm sure I'll come by the ideal comprehensive book eventually.
My questions are:
- Do you normalize samples, and why?
- How loud do you set the samples, and why?
- If you use an algorithm to set the volume, how do you determine which method to use?
- How do you take care that samples (especially ones that belong to a set) are of a similar volume?
- Is there a good way to batch-process samples for volume? (Mac, please)
- In which cases would you save a sample in mono vs. stereo?
Background info that's not a strictly necessary read in order to answer the questions:
Earlier, I was working on a project on my Maschine+ (standalone workstation) and needed to add a layerable sample that I'd recorded in Logic. Made a set of variations, just in case. Not knowing what the good practices are, I took a guess, normalized them, and sent to Maschine+. Fair enough, they sound fine when played back from the computer, but when browsing through samples in Maschine+, they were disturbingly loud compared to the factory stuff as well as the custom downloaded samples that I'd added there. Sure, I put them into the project and adjusted the track volume, but before I start making any more samples, I see that I should understand the process better, so I can establish good habits from the start; I don't want to browse samples with my headphones on, and get jolted by loud surprises! It does actually happen occasionally with factory content as well, but it shouldn't be, and I don't want to become one of those creators!
Thoughts?
What are actually the good practices for saving samples?
I can easily observe that .wav should be the file format.
But what I'm perhaps the most concerned about is the volume level; I must admit that the concept of volume still confuses me in music technology, and I'm looking for a good book on all this "boring but necessary stuff that you don't learn just through serendipitous fun". But now I'd just want to get on with the project anyway, I'm sure I'll come by the ideal comprehensive book eventually.
My questions are:
- Do you normalize samples, and why?
- How loud do you set the samples, and why?
- If you use an algorithm to set the volume, how do you determine which method to use?
- How do you take care that samples (especially ones that belong to a set) are of a similar volume?
- Is there a good way to batch-process samples for volume? (Mac, please)
- In which cases would you save a sample in mono vs. stereo?
Background info that's not a strictly necessary read in order to answer the questions:
Earlier, I was working on a project on my Maschine+ (standalone workstation) and needed to add a layerable sample that I'd recorded in Logic. Made a set of variations, just in case. Not knowing what the good practices are, I took a guess, normalized them, and sent to Maschine+. Fair enough, they sound fine when played back from the computer, but when browsing through samples in Maschine+, they were disturbingly loud compared to the factory stuff as well as the custom downloaded samples that I'd added there. Sure, I put them into the project and adjusted the track volume, but before I start making any more samples, I see that I should understand the process better, so I can establish good habits from the start; I don't want to browse samples with my headphones on, and get jolted by loud surprises! It does actually happen occasionally with factory content as well, but it shouldn't be, and I don't want to become one of those creators!
Thoughts?