D
downonthestreet
New member
I'm compiling a CD of old 77/78 punk songs I re-recorded over a decade ago, then using a Tascam 4track. Most of them didn't have bass recorded, so I've added bass now using Cool Edit Pro, and am currently in the process of mixing down and burning to CD.
I can't figure out WHY I get some songs down to CD sounding nice and loud and clear and gutsy, while a few others just won't cut it, regardless of my duplicating the processing that is successful with other songs. All the songs are simple full-on wall-of-guitar punk rock, and all were recorded at the same volume level originally. Most were compressed when originally recorded, using an Alesis 3630, so those I am not re-compressing in CEP. The songs that were not compressed originally, I have been compressing in CEP.
Is there a general principle I'm missing, perhaps? Can anyone say, in general terms, what needs to be done to get a song sounding as loud as the others, and thumping out? Exactly what determines the final volume of a song on the CD you burn to?
Note: I've been using Noise Reduction and Normalising prior to the final mixdown in all cases, yet still there is inconsistency in the CD vol levels and quality of sound of the songs. What I don't get is that I would have thought that the final act of normalising would ensure the CD volume levels of all songs thus treated would be the same. They ain't!
Something I've noticed is that in the case of some of the songs that haven't burnt to CD very well, there is a difference in wave height in L and R tracks. The R might be nice and loud, while the L is not as loud. Normalising doesn't make an appreciable difference, unless I deselect the loud track and normalise only the quieter one. I have a feeling this is counterproductive, as the discrepancy in wave heights between L and R tracks is probably due to panned bass, yeah? (Seems that when the bass is panned L, the L track wave is higher; when panned right, the R is higher).
Also, with some songs, I have mixed them down so loud that their waves are square-topped and the vol indicator is stuck in the red - yet these seem to sound good and gutsy on CD. Maybe I just can't recognise clipping when I hear it??!
Anyway, already too much info...would be grateful for the thoughts of those many folk who understand this HD recording process far better than I.
I can't figure out WHY I get some songs down to CD sounding nice and loud and clear and gutsy, while a few others just won't cut it, regardless of my duplicating the processing that is successful with other songs. All the songs are simple full-on wall-of-guitar punk rock, and all were recorded at the same volume level originally. Most were compressed when originally recorded, using an Alesis 3630, so those I am not re-compressing in CEP. The songs that were not compressed originally, I have been compressing in CEP.
Is there a general principle I'm missing, perhaps? Can anyone say, in general terms, what needs to be done to get a song sounding as loud as the others, and thumping out? Exactly what determines the final volume of a song on the CD you burn to?
Note: I've been using Noise Reduction and Normalising prior to the final mixdown in all cases, yet still there is inconsistency in the CD vol levels and quality of sound of the songs. What I don't get is that I would have thought that the final act of normalising would ensure the CD volume levels of all songs thus treated would be the same. They ain't!
Something I've noticed is that in the case of some of the songs that haven't burnt to CD very well, there is a difference in wave height in L and R tracks. The R might be nice and loud, while the L is not as loud. Normalising doesn't make an appreciable difference, unless I deselect the loud track and normalise only the quieter one. I have a feeling this is counterproductive, as the discrepancy in wave heights between L and R tracks is probably due to panned bass, yeah? (Seems that when the bass is panned L, the L track wave is higher; when panned right, the R is higher).
Also, with some songs, I have mixed them down so loud that their waves are square-topped and the vol indicator is stuck in the red - yet these seem to sound good and gutsy on CD. Maybe I just can't recognise clipping when I hear it??!
Anyway, already too much info...would be grateful for the thoughts of those many folk who understand this HD recording process far better than I.