If you read through the all caps paragraph (took me two widely spaced attempts), he unwittingly (I think) makes a point which explains why record execs like loud records. When things are that loud, your mind treats it like white noise, and starts to filter it out. The record companies like for you to not pay attention to the music, because that way, when you listen to the radio, you won’t notice you hate the song which is on, so you won’t change the station. If you don't change the station, you will hear the commercials, which is all the radio folks (Clear Channel and all) care about.
I once heard a record company president explain that, on country radio, they have learned that if you play a ballad, half the people will love it, and half will hate it. Country radio, therefore, does not play ballads, because they know that if they do, a large part of their audience will change the station, and thus will not hear the commercials.
I also am upset about all of this. The record by Audioslave (Chris Cornell and the guys from Rage Against the Machine) was mixed and mastered loud. I love the music, but I have a hard time listening to the record, because there is no dynamic range. AGH!!!
Light
"Cowards can never be moral."
M.K. Gandhi