Cloneboy Studio said:
It's *SO* much more insidious--and widespread--than rock producers. It's a mook thing.
Exactly. It's almost like an infection, no one really knows where it began. It only comes to mind after it becomes a big enough problem. Stoping at rock producers would be the incomplete statement.
Cloneboy Studio said:
Until it is widely believed that "too loud" albums = less record sales this will continue. Like I said, it's a mook thing.
Well sadly, I don't beleive there's any direct correlation between loudness and record sales. *However*, I do believe that is an important piece of the puzzle.
And even if they could prove that loudness does in fact mean bad sales, then what? How would responsible professionals like us repair the damage?
Or maybe today's youth is simply evolving to love loud and smashed music?
How could an engineer in 2006 prepare for that?
I ask myself these things cause it seems to be a serious issue for everyone in the music business.
I suppose the best way to achieve anything involving the public listener would be to ease it slowly into society. Kind of like how DVD technology was slowly eased into our everyday lives. Kind of how Bush slowly perverted the reasons and motifs for invading Iraq (just for the sake of argument).
It might very well take another 10 years to undo the damage loud music has done. Maybe 20. Or maybe just something thats part of the evolutionary process. (Can we handle any louder?).
At this rate, our ears can't keep up with the evolution of louder and louder material. So it has to become unbearable at some point.
I can say this:
If music is going to get any louder and if that's what I have to put up with to make a living for the next 35-40 years, I would rather focus on music that's worth pushing out there than distroy the only two pairs of ears I will ever have.
Such a shame, cause rock has always been the first passion on my list and I always want it to be so.
Of course, all these things are easier said than done.
I always have faith that some improvement will turn up.