I don't use iTune or iPods or iPads....however, there are MILLIONS of people who do.
That's really the point of the article.
We as home-rec/musicians tend to live somewhat in an "audio
bubble", so our views and practices are specific to that...but the general public is what drives trends, and when it comes to audio/music, and what sells, and how people listen to music.....it most certainly can be affected by iTunes.
So like....if the majority of commercial releases are available on iTunes for the general public, and the audio levels are being controlled by algorithms, it only stands to reason that commercial artists and studios will tailor the levels to work with the algorithms rather than be negatively affected by them....you think?
Once that happens, if it happens....it will trickle down even into the home-rec world.
Really, the fact the music loudness was triggered by digital's ability to let the audio get compressed and limited right up to "0"...makes it pretty likely that the same digital technology can/will be used to now control the level to a standard loudness, and I'm sure if it happens, most commercial players will follow suit so that music on one distribution outlet doesn't sound out of place on another. It will all be the same loudness.
This is also being driven by the new laws regarding broadcast loudness limits....so the writing is on the wall.
I don’t much care which way it goes….I never got obsessed with having everything be LOUD! just for the sake of loudness. I mean, it just doesn’t matter, people can listen at whatever level their
power amp can deliver….or their iPod.
