And if anyone comes into this thread with the eternally stupid "If you want it loud, just turn up the volume", I'm going to reach through my computer and punch them in the brain.
Well, you could just turn the volume up.......or dow
OUCH !
It's a stupid "solution", if for no other reason than you're going to forget to turn it back down for the next tune and you'll end up blowing your head off or blowing your speakers up.
I'm possibly in the minority here but as far back as I can recall, I've never had issues making the odd adjustment volume wise when a song is a bit quiet or loud. It's extremely rare that this has ever happened though.
Back in the walkman days, I used to record my albums onto tape as loud as they would go without totally wrecking the sound {though sometimes I did !} for the express reason that I wouldn't have to make volume adjustments as I was listening to stuff while riding a bike on a busy road or travelling on a train or in a car.
But even with smashed recordings of nowadays, they still differ from song to song, album to album. I don't find the volumes to be identical but the discrepancy is never so bad either way that my ears get blasted, neither was it in 'the old days'.
I'm still going to try to get my tunes as loud as I can while still sounding as good as possible. Bottom line.
Like I said earlier, before most of us on this site were born, there was a kind of arms race in terms of getting the loudest masters possible. I don't recall albums sounding bad because of their loudness or lack of it although I did notice from 1981 that if you played a stack of albums with the volume knob at the same level, some were much louder than others and it wasn't connected with the style of music.
The logic behind loud masters in the 60s was that louder sounded better because you could hear everything with greater impact. But even if a quiet song or section of a song was mastered loud, it was still quiet in relation to the other songs {or parts of songs} that weren't, because everything was proportionate.
There are as many shitty "dynamic" albums are there are shitty "loud" albums
This may not be the bottom line but over the last 80 years it's certainly been the reality. The main issue for me has long been, is the album/song good and worth keeping, not is it too loud or too quiet.