The Future of Mastering: Loudness in the Age of Music Streaming

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  • Опубліковано 2 жов 2024

КОМЕНТАРІ • 1,2 тис.

  • @lucas.n
    @lucas.n 4 роки тому +939

    14:00 the Streaming services don't seem to care much about the listener's health when they play their ads though.

    • @roddydykes7053
      @roddydykes7053 4 роки тому +32

      Lucas N yeah how the hell can they blast those at near double-volume

    • @petesmith9475
      @petesmith9475 4 роки тому +7

      you can install thing called adblock and stop whining.

    • @SmellMyKKPP
      @SmellMyKKPP 4 роки тому +36

      So in the end the streaming services win the loudness war no matter what lol

    • @kurtgerd7886
      @kurtgerd7886 4 роки тому +28

      @@petesmith9475 Which you can't really do on smartphones. Also you could just pay for the service.

    • @user-lt2rw5nr9s
      @user-lt2rw5nr9s 4 роки тому +10

      @@kurtgerd7886 Patched apps, but yeah. Pay for it.

  • @10HW
    @10HW 3 роки тому +80

    My girlfriend called me halfway through this and I never felt so much interrupted in my whole life

  • @nibblesd.biscuits4270
    @nibblesd.biscuits4270 4 роки тому +446

    A quiet guy speaking softly about loudness. 👍🏼

    • @cosmicaudio4589
      @cosmicaudio4589 4 роки тому +13

      And exactly what he was saying, less is more. Shouting means no one listens It's that subjectivity he talks about. And that equates to compression.

    • @tomlebeau7921
      @tomlebeau7921 4 роки тому +5

      David Paul PRACTICE WHAT YOU PREACH

    • @louderthangod
      @louderthangod 4 роки тому +21

      Walk softly and carry a big limiter.

    • @zxp3ct3r41
      @zxp3ct3r41 3 роки тому +2

      You folks have no clue what the word means

    • @haydendillon-lloyd9304
      @haydendillon-lloyd9304 3 роки тому

      God. Yes....

  • @robbrown1970
    @robbrown1970 4 роки тому +607

    This was a very interesting presentation, but kinda sucks that he got rushed for time towards the end. I feel like he possibly had a plethora of more information he could have provided. I would love to see a "full length" un-rushed presentation of this material. It would be great if Alan could record the full version and upload to youtube. I feel like it's an important message to get out there.

    • @artfxdnb
      @artfxdnb 4 роки тому +32

      Totally agree, towards the end I felt like he was going to talk about how this would translate to genres where compression and saturation have become 'part of the sound', but it was then just rushed over quickly without much information regarding this side of loudness. I think especially today this is actually a very interesting topic to talk about since a lot of electronic genres do rely on smashing things.
      Still, this was a great video though, it actually showed in a pretty easy and understandable way what the whole new loudness normalization means and what it does. However since I come from a background of 'heavier' electronic music and grew up making Hip Hop, I do wished he continued more on the topic of what it means for those genres and how to tackle it.

    • @CoGAmbientMusic
      @CoGAmbientMusic 4 роки тому +2

      @@artfxdnb I guess i've infered what's the point. Even though we do make music that is comp-heavy, that's part of sound design, while we can change some of the decisions on the mix/master part such as limiters or comps or saturator to gain volume, and light final limiting. I'm just trying to do so.

    • @mal2ksc
      @mal2ksc 4 роки тому +17

      It seemed to me the message was "Forget everything you knew about making yourself louder. That exploit has been patched, now all you're doing is making yourself sound small and shitty." The beauty of it is that the solution is to return to _doing nothing._ Use whatever dynamic range you need to use. Compress because you want a certain sound, not because you think it's required. Then stop.
      It might seem that taking a step out of the workflow would actually be welcome, but like reverb on a bad vocalist, it's possible to hide a lot of sins behind compression. If you have been, now you have to fix them.

    • @AMpr0d
      @AMpr0d 4 роки тому +7

      @@mal2ksc compressors can finally go back to their intended use case. We love to put compressors on every single track, but now we don't HAVE to get it to a certain point. We can actually put as much as the track needed and maybe even take it off because it wasn't necessary. This opens up so much more options for creativity gotta love it.

    • @FloydMaxwell
      @FloydMaxwell 4 роки тому +1

      The loudness war claimed another victim, lol

  • @mal2ksc
    @mal2ksc 4 роки тому +98

    It feels like a decades-old exploit has been patched. Finally.

  • @matteoperron5436
    @matteoperron5436 4 роки тому +546

    "all the limiters sound completely different" me sitting here not hearing a single difference lmao

    • @MalcolmBlakeSeeAndHear
      @MalcolmBlakeSeeAndHear 4 роки тому +6

      Me too exactly hahaha

    • @nicholascowan1731
      @nicholascowan1731 4 роки тому +81

      You guys must not mix music lol

    • @dharmapunk777
      @dharmapunk777 4 роки тому +20

      I had the same and my thinking was that I am listening through youtube and on a bose speaker.

    • @roddydykes7053
      @roddydykes7053 4 роки тому +103

      Mattéo Perron if you were there in the auditorium, you probably would. But across UA-cam, no way

    • @mr.soundguy5621
      @mr.soundguy5621 4 роки тому +35

      They limit different harmonics in the track in order to create its "Sound" essentially blending all the frequencies together. Some limiters focus on high end transients better where others focus on the midrange or lower midrange. Thats why some limiters can sound warm or bright. So they are all doing the same thing essentially just balancing the track out differntly if it makes sense. Turn up the music and when you feel it, then you will hear the difference.

  • @ShapeNoise
    @ShapeNoise 4 роки тому +315

    Phasing tracks to hear what Limiters are doing is a cool tip

    • @markmcclellan8421
      @markmcclellan8421 4 роки тому +1

      What do you mean by phasing tracks? Do you mean putting tracks out of phase? Or putting them through a phaser? Or what?

    • @ZRock7771
      @ZRock7771 4 роки тому +42

      @@markmcclellan8421 if you invert the audio wave and play the non inverted wave with the limiter on one you will hear the difference between the two audio files, meaning you will hear only what your limiter is doing

    • @pacman_pol_pl_polska
      @pacman_pol_pl_polska 4 роки тому +43

      @Gabriel Freitas Get two tracks, one under the other.
      One before limiting, second after limiting.
      Invert the phase of one of the two tracks. Some DAWs have invert phase button on every track, or you can use some plugin that has that feature.
      Inverting phase makes the waveform flip upside down. When it went up, now it goes down.
      Two identical tracks when flipped will cancel themselves. It's like having +10 and then adding flipped -10, the result is 0.
      When one track will be limited, everything will be canceled apart from the work made by limiter.

    • @boomish69
      @boomish69 4 роки тому +4

      Soldat don’t forget a null test will only fully cancel if the waveforms are identical, any random modulation will be different so you will also hear that too, try inverting the 2 bounces of the same mix, EG if there is a reverb with an LFO of some kind in it you’ll hear that difference.

    • @ZRock7771
      @ZRock7771 4 роки тому +3

      @@pacman_pol_pl_polska this is exactly how its done. thanks for clearing it up, a lot more detail then my 1st comment.

  • @doyouknowwhodariusminesis7854
    @doyouknowwhodariusminesis7854 4 роки тому +7

    WOW! Never heard exactly what a limiter was doing. This is amazing

  • @The8BitBigBand
    @The8BitBigBand 3 роки тому +137

    Alan masters ALL of our recordings and he is a certifiable bad ass through and through!

    • @Enstinc
      @Enstinc 3 роки тому

      Listen to what I’ve created n mixed my self does it sound loud enough.

    • @Enstinc
      @Enstinc 3 роки тому +2

      ua-cam.com/video/WiILtL0dzUQ/v-deo.html

    • @Felipemelazzi
      @Felipemelazzi 3 роки тому

      Now I'm impressed!

    • @Joeknowsit-ALL
      @Joeknowsit-ALL 3 роки тому

      I even heard the difference samsung phone 😆

    • @Felipemelazzi
      @Felipemelazzi 3 роки тому

      @@DIVERGENCE777
      Yes??

  • @GeneralKenobi69420
    @GeneralKenobi69420 3 роки тому +26

    Am I an audio engineer? No.
    Am I a music producer? Nope.
    Do I even do anything related to sound? Not at all.
    Did I watch the whole thing?
    Oh hell yes.

  • @eddysel10
    @eddysel10 4 роки тому +196

    He deserves a grammy. One of the best explanations on this topic. 30 minutes was too short. I wish he had the time to really show how to use those loudness meters / plugins.

    • @JackHekler
      @JackHekler 3 роки тому +1

      indeed, I would like to see hours of this

    • @bodyworksdw
      @bodyworksdw 3 роки тому

      He’s actually got quite a few grammys

  • @nebularain3338
    @nebularain3338 3 роки тому +34

    "Ten million dollars a day from streaming"
    And the actual artists see a pittance from that.

    • @IcidLink
      @IcidLink 3 роки тому +4

      Don’t Worry Jay Z, Beyoncé, Kanye West, Tailor Swift make enough money already

    • @AbitLippy
      @AbitLippy 3 роки тому +2

      The music industry is the devil's office.

    • @1998Cebola
      @1998Cebola 3 роки тому

      They should either start their own label or negotiate their contracts better. I don't pity adults having everything done for them and then complaining they're not multi-millionares.

    • @matrixate
      @matrixate 3 роки тому

      and that's too much in their eyes. They will keep raising the price just to upload to streaming platforms. At one point, it will be art for those that can afford it, making no money from it but paying to have their art heard and gain prestige merely from the popularity.

  • @morgendorffer3504
    @morgendorffer3504 4 роки тому +67

    as reggie watts would say: "... and there is a profoundness... to this loudness... that is especially hard... to come down with"

  • @dharmapunk777
    @dharmapunk777 4 роки тому +7

    This was by the far the most interesting thing I've watched all week, maybe in the last month. I don't even mix or produce. I just love music. Damn shame to cut it short.

  • @grahamtaylor6883
    @grahamtaylor6883 4 роки тому +182

    That chart showing cinema dynamic range explains a lot. There are so many movies, that when watched at home are terrible. The actors mumble at such a low volume (in that fake Hollywood gruff voice), what they're saying is inaudible. I always rant in my head 'what kind of sound engineer moron has done this'. It ruins the movie in a home environment. I think I need a compressor on the TV output.

    • @henri-fillipbauer6579
      @henri-fillipbauer6579 4 роки тому +2

      dope

    • @RealHomeRecording
      @RealHomeRecording 4 роки тому +17

      It's because the sound job is rushed and under budget. Good, fast and cheap pick two.

    • @Projacked1
      @Projacked1 4 роки тому +6

      I was thinking the excact same thing, good point brother.

    • @aleksik4028
      @aleksik4028 4 роки тому +25

      And then comes sound effects, car chases, music, etc and your ears are bleeding. But barely hear what is been said. Same goes to most TV programs/shows and also so many youtube videos. Music is many times way too loud compared to conversations. Have to keep adjusting volume.

    • @darikdatta
      @darikdatta 4 роки тому +21

      This is a common problem. The "night mode" on a lot of digital receivers is a compressor. My DVD player also has a dynamic range compression feature tucked away in a menu.

  • @xsatn2082
    @xsatn2082 4 роки тому +51

    That dynamic range of the jazz track really made it sound interesting and pleasant to the ear others were boring

    • @IcidLink
      @IcidLink 3 роки тому +6

      Yeah Jazz is amazing in this regard. The problem is the most modern Pop Music is Over Produced Quite bland Music with no dynamics whatsoever

    • @jimdixon3470
      @jimdixon3470 3 роки тому +2

      @@IcidLink Sadly, some labels (UMG) have been compressing the crap out of even acoustic jazz releases in the 21st century. John Scofield's recordings come to mind. His Blue Notes from 1990-1992 with Joe Lovano had a very high dynamic range. He reformed this band around 2015 and put out an album on Verve that sounds much less "alive" than digital recordings released 25 years earlier, with considerably lower dynamic range. Small labels are still releasing jazz albums with great sound, however.

  • @dontaskwhatkindofmusic
    @dontaskwhatkindofmusic 4 роки тому +273

    i haven't been paying attention to what he's saying but the sound of his calm voice has improved my mastering skills

    • @SroSocial
      @SroSocial 4 роки тому +1

      yes

    • @victorgabriel-udoh3376
      @victorgabriel-udoh3376 4 роки тому +2

      this comment needs an award!😹

    • @notingz
      @notingz 4 роки тому +1

      haaa😂😷👌🏽

    • @russell_szabados
      @russell_szabados 3 роки тому +1

      @Don’t Ask What Kind Of Music absolutely!

    • @russell_szabados
      @russell_szabados 3 роки тому +1

      I fell asleep watching UA-cam on my iPad, and this video was playing when I woke up yesterday. It was so laid back & mellow. Good thing it was Saturday, I might have missed work.

  • @pelbriks
    @pelbriks 4 роки тому +18

    This all works to a certain extent. All my albums were mastered at -9 LUFS. Then I learned more about this topic so I decided to master my last album at -14 LUFS. Result? On Spotify, my last album sounds quieter than the previous ones.
    Now I think I've done everything right, I also involved an external mastering engineer to make sure everything was right. But if I could come back in time I would master my last album at -9 LUFS as well.

    • @SonicScoop
      @SonicScoop  4 роки тому +6

      Thanks so much for sharing this story Fabio. To a degree, it depends to a degree on the genre, EQ curve and style of mixing, I think.
      If the mix is already pretty compressed loud, turning it down won't make it louder on streaming services. Alternately, if there is a lot of low end in the track, that can make it sound relatively quiet compared to other tracks at the same LUFS level that are brighter. There are other factors I could go on about here.
      As a mastering engineer myself, I always try to do my last pass of level setting by ear, comparing to relevant references. For me, meters are a guide and never the final decision maker.
      Hope that helps!!
      -Justin

    • @gregrodrigueziii8075
      @gregrodrigueziii8075 4 роки тому +5

      Just to be clear, did you master your tracks peaking at -14dbfs or you mastered in -14LUFS. 80% of the time people get confused with this so im just making sure. Because a track mastered at -14LUFS cant really be lower in loudness if a -9dbfs master is normalized to -14LUFS. If you really did mastered in LUFS, most likely your 1st album was more dynamic in the 1st place compared to the 2nd one, A highly compressed and crushed peaking at -14dbfs will always sound quiter than a highly dynamic track mastered in -14LUFS I mean after all -14LUFS can have parts peaking at -6dbfs compared to a crushed -14dbfs whos limited to just -14dbfs. So i just want to know if its really -14LUFS or just metered in -14dbfs.

    • @pelbriks
      @pelbriks 4 роки тому +3

      Greg Rodriguez III it was mastered at -14LUFS with peaks at -0.2dbfs (that’s where the ceiling of the limiter was set)

    • @gregrodrigueziii8075
      @gregrodrigueziii8075 4 роки тому +1

      ​@@pelbriks wow tha'ts weird now I guess. Was this spotify? Was the -9LUFS master also peaks at -0.2dbfs? if its, then I could guess there is something wrong with spotify with their algorithm now, thats a bummer. cause both should be just as relatively loud at -14LUFS. cause im assuming the dynamic rage would be just the same(of course other things takes into account). Thanks for the tip, I guess people should be careful about spotify cause it has that problem. Honestly in my country I usually have a problem with this specs cause networks here are still using the old standard, so at some point using LUFS doesnt even matter to them, they just want something that peaks at -3dbfs mono!. They dont even care about EBU R128, I actualy caught one network engineer who doesnt even know EBU R128 guidelines!

    • @pelbriks
      @pelbriks 4 роки тому +2

      Greg Rodriguez III I’ve no idea 🙂 but yes there’s something weird for sure. I dig Justin comments though, maybe more bass in the mix can lead to a different apparent loudness

  • @julianchlin
    @julianchlin 3 роки тому +15

    11:06 is the key point, 12:19 pop dynamic rang, 12:57 peak normalization, 14:12 loundness normalization, 16:43 new targets, 24:19 different level demo track, 25:13 Level all the same, 26:10 what happened, 28:00 VU is getting back!

  • @1onehustleinc.955
    @1onehustleinc.955 4 роки тому +2

    Never heard anyone so accurate about audio mastering.

  • @Hugoknots
    @Hugoknots 4 роки тому +15

    22:20 "the limiters little secret" - (mildly) mind blowing demonstration that summarizes the negative effects of current mastering practices.

    • @MollyWi
      @MollyWi 4 роки тому +5

      I really don't think so, the difference is distortion yes, but because the source envelopes are a different shape to the target envelopes you never hear this type of distortion, because you are never comparing the envelopes. So to say you can hear the distortion is pretty much like subtracting a song played on the piano, from one played on the guitar and listening to the only the harmonic differences (Which could be interesting.. now I think about it 🤔).

    • @Hugoknots
      @Hugoknots 4 роки тому +4

      @@MollyWi hmm im not sure if your right. He literally states that we are hearing what the limiter is clipping out while still blending in the clipped information into the original track. Am I mistaken? I can time stamp his statement if you wish.. and I, unfortunately, believe him more than you lol

    • @MollyWi
      @MollyWi 4 роки тому +3

      @@Hugoknots If you listen to the difference of two digital signal processing functions then you would literally hear distortion, but how is that a surprise? It doesn't mean there is distortion there, it means the difference sounds horrible.
      Just like you applied two limiters with different envelopes to a pure sine wave with some resulting phase offset, the difference between the two will sound impure and horrible, however listening to the results of either independently will sound perfectly pure and non distorted.
      Also, some of these limiters are multi-band, so you should and would expect harmonic differences between the limited and non limited versions. Which is also not distortion, it is just purely a different envelope shape than the original.

    • @nathanconholio1863
      @nathanconholio1863 4 роки тому +5

      The distortion is definitely in the mix. When the mix still sounds clean it just means the distortion volume is so low, that you can't here it conciously

    • @MollyWi
      @MollyWi 4 роки тому +2

      @@nathanconholio1863 I don't think you can understand, if you had two versions of a just a pure sine wave, at different levels and different temporal envelopes, both independently would have REAL phase distortion maybe (0.000%) however, differentiating them will produce something that sounds like distortion, because you hearing the overtones on a set of envelopes. It is not distortion, just a different level of envelopes and harmonics.

  • @Baphometrix
    @Baphometrix 4 роки тому +13

    Every genre has its own signature dynamic range. Ironically, only when rushed at the very end does Alan mention this, so this important concept isn't given the weight it should be. Too many people hear presentations like this and walk away thinking "I should mix and master to -14 LUFS or -12 LUFS, to take full advantage of the dynamic range at that level", when that isn't really the case at all. For jazz and other quiet genres? Sure! For EDM or Pop? Nope. Your song will sound thin and tepid and weaksauce if you do that.

    • @Baphometrix
      @Baphometrix 4 роки тому

      @ListenAndLearned Curses! They're onto me! ^.^

    • @JordanTelezino
      @JordanTelezino 4 роки тому

      exactly, it was only at the end when he was finally about to talk about what the next step should be to help solve this then he was cut off and it ended smh

  • @flatearthsocietyleiden7857
    @flatearthsocietyleiden7857 4 роки тому +85

    I did not know that Michel Foucault was still alive and that he knew this much about music!

    • @strumspicks2456
      @strumspicks2456 4 роки тому +2

      it's actually Michael Pollan

    • @Kizip
      @Kizip 4 роки тому

      Strums & Picks no shit Sherlock

    • @strumspicks2456
      @strumspicks2456 4 роки тому +2

      @@Kizip a mushroom told me

    • @nerfytheclown
      @nerfytheclown 4 роки тому +2

      ...I thought that was a pretty good one. Cheers.

  • @BooyahL
    @BooyahL 4 роки тому +18

    Really cool for the NBA commissioner to give audio engineering advice on his free time

  • @saharasgreenery4834
    @saharasgreenery4834 4 роки тому +31

    this was great and overall informative, but I hope he realizes that on Spotify users can disable the normalization, which basically makes it where the difference in LUFS from track to track will vary accordingly. he was kinda speaking on it as if this is a global permanent change, but it’s definitely not. still useful to be aware of how it works when it’s enabled... I believe it defaults to being enabled and most ppl probably don’t change the settings but it’s definitely possible to disable

    • @SonicScoop
      @SonicScoop  4 роки тому +27

      True! Most people will never touch or even look for that button. But it is there, hiding in the shadows.
      Anyone willing to look for it, is probably the kind of person who is comfortable using their volume knob though :)
      -Justin

    • @justinbeck8459
      @justinbeck8459 4 роки тому +8

      99.9% of consumers definitely have no clue that it even exists, let alone what that even means when they see it. But yeah, just looked and it’s there! Shhhh! Don’t tell anyone!!! 😉

    • @damienlewis7882
      @damienlewis7882 4 роки тому +2

      I think it still turns down the loud stuff though. Just doesn’t bring up quieter songs. I’ll have to try it again and measure.

    • @saharasgreenery4834
      @saharasgreenery4834 4 роки тому +4

      Damien Lewis I did the experiment before my original reply lol. It does not turn down the louder songs. It leaves all songs in their original form.

    • @IcidLink
      @IcidLink 3 роки тому

      I tried it and changed it back because I hear a lot of different Genres and it was jarring that every second Song was quieter than the one before

  • @Noone-of-your-Business
    @Noone-of-your-Business 4 роки тому +300

    Forced loudness leveling basically wins the loudness wars after 3 decades of pop that has been limited so much it ended up pretty much dead sounding and with unbearable kickdrum pumping. So we finally get our dynamic range back.
    Proves me right for _not_ compressing the shit out of my mixes even at the cost of them sounding quieter on a standard stereo system. If you want it louder, use the friggin' *volume* dial.

    • @3llipsis181
      @3llipsis181 4 роки тому +12

      I think the idea he was trying to convey is that forced leveling is not an issue that has to relate to loudness if working with transient shaping and balancing so that the track doesnt feel so quiet.

    • @jasonsteves734
      @jasonsteves734 4 роки тому +1

      @@3llipsis181 Do you mean that the process just has changed for the same outcome?

    • @3llipsis181
      @3llipsis181 4 роки тому +9

      @@jasonsteves734 essentially yes. The dB range has been more limited, but it does not mean we are incapable of combatting that issue by realizing loudness does not necessarily translate to a higher dB. It also has to do with the frequencies boosted, the transient shaping, etc. I think it is better for us because especially things like classical music had such a dynamic range that volume levels changing so fast made it impossible to listen to certain songs without having to change the volume part way through

    • @lucaswojatschke3883
      @lucaswojatschke3883 4 роки тому +1

      right! And on the radio it's still overcompressed anyway

    • @squidcaps4308
      @squidcaps4308 4 роки тому +23

      The thing that most forget it s that compression/limiting should be done by the end user. If they are in noisy environment or need to listen to it at nights, at low levels, the limiting should be more aggressive. And when they are listening in quiet environment with more sound pressure, limiting should be non aggressive. The volume knob is actually the wrong adjustment for most needs. If you ever had the "pleasure" of mixing bespoke to one room, one system, one environment, it becomes quite obvious. You can get to perfection when it is used only in one place and the environment is static, doesn't change (for ex, art installations, theater etc). What most users need is not just gain, it is both limiter and gain.
      Luckily, more and more customers do have dynamic range control, sadly they are very simple but it already makes our job so much easier. You do not have to master for headphones used in a sub/metro, the listening device has thought of that and does the final "crush" itself. What we need is a standard that all manufacturers need to follow.. Just simple none/mild/medium/strong limiting defaults, done the same way in each device. If we had that, we could easily give our mixes and masters more room the breathe and we can test the results in a standard limiter to make sure it works with all the defaults.

  • @rustyjames1727
    @rustyjames1727 4 роки тому +44

    I was waiting for Rick Rubin's name to be mentioned 🤣🤣🤣

    • @kopczas
      @kopczas 4 роки тому +2

      Rick "the butcher" Rubin?? The man that made Santanas masterpiece unlistenable ..

    • @MrAngrybassist
      @MrAngrybassist 3 роки тому +2

      @@kopczas Oh, and don't forget Death Magnetic and 13, among many others. Corey Taylor even stated that he never wanted to work with Rubin ever again after Slipknot recorded Vol.3: The Subliminal Verses.

    • @gaycha6589
      @gaycha6589 3 роки тому

      Worked for RHCP, Johnny Cash etc

    • @oneword7143
      @oneword7143 3 роки тому

      @@kopczas Which album are you referring to?

    • @kopczas
      @kopczas 3 роки тому

      @@oneword7143 Africa Speaks.

  • @basspig
    @basspig 4 роки тому +67

    The loud mastering is only useful for smartphones that limit volume to avoid lawsuits by parents of deaf teenagers.
    For an audiophile, ANY limiting at all is a departure from reality.
    I got to hear a 2" RCA master tape on my system and I was stunned at how REAL it sounded. Playing these recordings on a hi dynamic range system is an experience like hearing the band in your room.
    Now today's music is so compressed that it is fatiguing to listen to. White space is so important in music. Without it, it loses the element of surprise which keeps it interesting.

    • @7k7yub7
      @7k7yub7 4 роки тому +3

      Limiting can make sense when producing/playing live elecronic music, I killed a couple of PAs myself because the owners didn´t expect they can be melted by synthesisers.

    • @basspig
      @basspig 4 роки тому +4

      @@7k7yub7 That's a problem of an inadequate PA, not your problem.
      Recordings with compression are fatiguing to listen to. Having heard a master tape recently, I was astonished at how much more "live" and fatiguing it sounded compared to the release on CD.

    • @7k7yub7
      @7k7yub7 4 роки тому +2

      @@basspig obviously you are right, I just wanted to make an argument that RIGHT sound engineering is important and that in the wild there is more then black and white.

    • @musicman3569
      @musicman3569 4 роки тому +2

      Absolutely, my friend! My ears find hard limiting and heavy compressing very offensive, especially when used on entire mixes. I just love sound of instruments with natural texture and space. For the typical material I work on I find that around -16 LUFS is the "liberation point" were the peaks are just naturally sitting below full scale (particularly if I've done good mic placement and instrument input), with maybe just a couple stray single moment peaks. It feels liberating to stop worrying about head room and just focus on the aesthetic of the mix artistically, and not have people asking why the mixes are so "quiet" when I chose to ignore the loudness war. Sad that it took so long to circle back to the gloriously large dynamic range we should have been able to keep from almost 40 years ago!

    • @basspig
      @basspig 4 роки тому +3

      @@musicman3569 People used to say that about my Bridgeport Symphony Orchestra recordings.. absolutely ZERO compression, for a totally "you are there" experience.
      In pop music, a little compression on individual instruments like kick drum or bass guitar can be used to fatten certain sounds, but overall compression is the devil.

  • @KarimLeMec
    @KarimLeMec 4 роки тому +160

    Loudness war was the worst low moments in music History.. now we won. We gained headroom

    • @larrylentini5688
      @larrylentini5688 4 роки тому +25

      Now everything is leveled except the ads :/

    • @RogerBarraud
      @RogerBarraud 4 роки тому +1

      'bout freakin' time!!11!
      :-)

    • @TheBeatle49
      @TheBeatle49 4 роки тому +1

      Yes. Still a problem in live performances.

    • @raedius_music
      @raedius_music 4 роки тому +1

      Still a problem in nightclubs

    • @andreatomassini5521
      @andreatomassini5521 3 роки тому +1

      Still a problem, sadly, just listen to most contemporary music.....but yeah, maybe something is changing

  • @GingerDrums
    @GingerDrums 3 роки тому

    The Tokyo Dawn Labs Limiter has a delta function, meaning you can just listen to the subtracted audio with a single click. It also sounds great!

  • @MastaPharaoh
    @MastaPharaoh 4 роки тому +34

    "We're basically tainting music..." This made me want to quit engineering right away by the look he gave lol

    • @n01z3
      @n01z3 4 роки тому +5

      was a savage truth though, i am guilty of this too. but he ended it on the positives. headroom and digital in the same sentence??? never thought i would hear that

    • @paulromelot5553
      @paulromelot5553 4 роки тому +3

      I felt his pain and nearly cried :D

    • @nsjx
      @nsjx 4 роки тому +1

      THE culmination of the decades-long battle 👍🏽 Streaming came as an unexpected knight-in-shinning armor to Pop world yet a thief-in-the-night to smaller record labels. MANY have been wiped from the planet, like the dinosaurs... but thankfully a good bunch of them have adapted to the change. Streaming HAS however sent these stragglers even further behind the industry giants however. But yeah, noisily loud music has been regulated. See? Regulation in the right WAY can be good. ;)

    • @oneword7143
      @oneword7143 3 роки тому

      The fact that he's wearing earplugs or hearing aids, tells you he's feeling the consequences of that distortion.

    • @aneeqkalson5550
      @aneeqkalson5550 3 роки тому +1

      seriously. the way he resigns afterwards when he feels the audience isn't fully grasping it is heartbreaking. 23:45

  • @Eventual420
    @Eventual420 4 роки тому

    I’m at home creating songs as a hobby and I love learning, so thank you UA-cam for recommending this video out of the blue. ❤️ YT Recommendations.

  • @michaelfarrow4648
    @michaelfarrow4648 4 роки тому +13

    Having known Alan for 40 years, I was very happy to see him again, if only virtually. Alan's musicality has always brightly shown through on every project we have worked on together. Alan, thanks for sharing your insight into a complex, changing and sometimes confusing subject.

  • @tc8387
    @tc8387 4 роки тому +16

    It’s funny that we add vinyl & tape noise to our digital music now with no reason but vintage effect.

    • @urphakeandgey6308
      @urphakeandgey6308 3 роки тому +1

      Did you know blinkers in cars are the same? The sound used to be mechanical. Now it's just there cuz that's what we expect and it also prevents us from leaving the blinker on.

  • @TT-md7mm
    @TT-md7mm 4 роки тому +12

    Yoooo, my mastering engineer learned under Alan Silverman and speaks VERY highly of him. Listen to everything this dude says.

  • @antfactor
    @antfactor 4 роки тому

    Not an engineer, but ... Skipped around (will go back later) - and even from ​22:00 on… Wow! Good stuff to know… It seems we can take back "more dynamics in mixes" yet still get decent levels... with "less compression" unless wanted - essentially? Will def listen to whole talk. Thanks!

  • @plasticmummyhead
    @plasticmummyhead 4 роки тому +42

    My mind is blown. I feel like one of those soldiers who's been hiding in the woods and didn't know that the war is over. Thank you Alan! What a great presentation, wish I could hear the rest!

    • @ossicles6
      @ossicles6 3 роки тому +3

      had this EXACT thought. EXACTLY.

  • @NickHillMakesMusic
    @NickHillMakesMusic 3 роки тому +1

    This video is F'ng awesome!

  • @OdinOfficialEmcee
    @OdinOfficialEmcee 4 роки тому +39

    I always mix with a VU meter. Everything gain staged to -18db on the individual tracks before I mix and a VU Meter on the master buss calibrated to -14db and the records really do sound so much better when the final mix is done.

    • @yassinetalbi5884
      @yassinetalbi5884 4 роки тому +2

      why -14 db on master buss ?

    • @OdinOfficialEmcee
      @OdinOfficialEmcee 4 роки тому +3

      @@yassinetalbi5884 couple of reasons. 1) your mix will never come out too hot, plenty of headroom
      2) less work in mastering needs to be done compressing and limiting to get up to commercial levels while still giving them lots of room to work
      3) your plugins on the master buss are still being hit in their sweet spot and your not blowing out compressors and EQ's with level

    • @OdinOfficialEmcee
      @OdinOfficialEmcee 4 роки тому +1

      @@yassinetalbi5884 I find anything less than -14 on the mixbuss results in an extremely quiet mix and any noise floor will be present in the final product (when gaining tracks to -18). And anything above -12 to -14 results in peak levels reaching close to zero and doesn't leave mastering a lot of room to work

    • @yassinetalbi5884
      @yassinetalbi5884 4 роки тому +2

      @@OdinOfficialEmcee Oh yeah ! sorry I just thought for a second we were talking about Peak volume not db VU.. that would be around -6 dbfs right ?

    • @OdinOfficialEmcee
      @OdinOfficialEmcee 4 роки тому +2

      @@yassinetalbi5884 A VU meter calibrated to -14db will read 0 when your RMS (Average) level is -14dbfs. Your peak level will be determined by how dynamic your mix is, instruments used, compression, etc. A real variety of factors. As a general rule of thumb though you're probably right and your peaks will fall between -10dbfs and -5dbfs, give or take a bit

  • @ScratonMusicOfficial
    @ScratonMusicOfficial 4 роки тому +39

    This is very true and informative video.
    As a producer myself being in the industry for over 8 years now, the massive change of how " Mastering " is perceived definitely varies from artist to artist. Do not forget that every genre, every specific sound deserves a completely different touch in order to make it stand out as the producer wishes it to be in result, so even if the particular style is meant to be very powerful, it does not necessarily mean people have to make it sound loud.
    I see the beauty of mastering in actual manual control, where every sounds is carefully crafted, tweaked and monitored so the result will sound as best as possible without having to simply let the automatic settings bleed it out.
    So the whole auto-normalizing might be helpful only to producers who do not master at all so in the very least their tracks do not blow the listener's speakers, but other than that, it sure does damage the quality if that same technique is done to " Already Mastered " track as it becomes less pronounced.
    But more of a reason to get it in the best quality so that goes away

    • @Jz-sv1ju
      @Jz-sv1ju 4 роки тому

      Scranton music official- So is there any point to mastering at all if it will be affected and if the standard will automatically do it then???

    • @travisyee8739
      @travisyee8739 4 роки тому +5

      @@Jz-sv1ju Normalization being applied by streaming services is not at all the same thing as mastering. Alan Silverman, in this very video, specifically states that loudness is subjective and influenced by many more variables than simply "level", and "level" is the only thing normalization is really affecting. Mastering itself creates tonal and dynamic changes in a piece of music that can be quite pleasing, and every track should be mastered, but depending on the genre some tracks will need very little in the way of dynamic reduction, and some will absolutely depend on that dynamic reduction to give it the sound that genre is known for.
      The point of all of this is that if you master your music above target LUFS levels set by various streaming services, it will be turned down by those streaming services, and that past a certain point you will have reduced dynamic range without the benefit of any perceived loudness on these streaming platforms. Normalization does not replace mastering, it sets a ceiling for it and discourages the continuation of the loudness wars.

    • @zxp3ct3r41
      @zxp3ct3r41 3 роки тому

      So when you're doing production tutorial?

    • @GuyGamer1
      @GuyGamer1 3 роки тому +2

      you watched the video yet you still don't appear to know how loudness normalization works.
      It does not affect the quality of your track, mastered or not.

    • @julianlopez723
      @julianlopez723 2 роки тому

      Please release a remaster of Secret Curiosity

  • @UndeadFleshgod
    @UndeadFleshgod 4 роки тому +10

    I think my definition of "completely different" is "completely different"

  • @josephramone5805
    @josephramone5805 Рік тому +2

    Brilliant video with invaluable information! 💯❗️👍🏼

  • @officialWWM
    @officialWWM 4 роки тому +10

    I have started turning my masters down. I mostly only record my own music with the odd project for other people and I use Ozone 9 for mastering. I have consciously started mastering to a lower level to retain dynamics in the music, especially on a ballad. To my ears, it sounds better and if you want it louder, you can just turn it up :)

  • @GhostSamaritan
    @GhostSamaritan 4 роки тому

    I use Thimeo Stereo Tool when listening to music. I can't wait till streaming services start using similar technologies.

  • @thromboid
    @thromboid 4 роки тому +7

    It's very heartening to see this finally happening. My only concern is that the next loudness war will be fought on perceived loudness and give us harsh, mid-heavy mixes and masters. But I think that will be harder to get away with.

  • @ZalasOrg
    @ZalasOrg 3 роки тому

    Dr Xavier of mastering! ;-) Such a fresh air breeze
    !

  • @Magnum_Opus_Music
    @Magnum_Opus_Music 4 роки тому +6

    ''RICK RUBIN CAN NOT CALL SPOTIFY AND SAY ''HEY DUDES I DON'T WANT -14 TO BE MY TRACK LEVEL I WANT IT TO BE -6'' 👈 😁 MADE MY DAY

  • @Watzzys
    @Watzzys 4 роки тому +1

    Great video! Important info! Thanks a lot!

  • @senseimilli
    @senseimilli 4 роки тому +9

    I honestly feel like the entire general notion of what this all entails can coincide with some type of futuristic philosophical evolution...

    • @Sh1tP0stM4nia
      @Sh1tP0stM4nia 4 роки тому

      I was thinking the same thing straight up

  • @massufiani7467
    @massufiani7467 4 роки тому +1

    an eye/mind opener thanks sonicscoop

  • @Deliquescentinsight
    @Deliquescentinsight 4 роки тому +10

    The clue is in the name: Compressors. If you squeeze everything else you get a squashed consistency

  • @fuzzypancake123
    @fuzzypancake123 11 місяців тому +2

    That was just amazing!! So clear and easy to understand. Loved it!! 😁

  • @inachu
    @inachu 4 роки тому +9

    I hope all mixers who work with classical music listen to this.

  • @leepshin
    @leepshin 4 роки тому +2

    It only took them a decade and Professor Farnsworth to work out that they were ruining the sound quality of music, and all because they forgot that all playback devices come with this thing called a ""!!VOLUME CONTROL!!""

  • @alexhormann8931
    @alexhormann8931 4 роки тому +6

    Ah, loudness war isn't over, it's never over, just the rules have changed. You can add a lot of subjective loudness to your mix while keeping the aimed lufs in place. The LU algorithm might be complex but cannot be tricked like the human ear. There are ways to sound actually louder at the same measured lufs.

    • @alexhormann8931
      @alexhormann8931 4 роки тому

      @ListenAndLearned
      Yes, I've got the point, it's around for several years now and definitely nothing new. My point is the possibility for more presence at the same measured lufs values.

    • @SonicScoop
      @SonicScoop  4 роки тому +1

      Thanks for the comment. It's true, LUFS isn't everything. But it's a decent additional reference to use. There are a lot of other factors at play in perceived loudness, including the overall frequency balance of the master. I always set my final loudness by ear when mastering. But a lot of these ideas are still very useful to know.
      -Justin

    • @jjm9741
      @jjm9741 3 роки тому

      I believe hes saying master using VU meters close to Zero DB with a calibrated meter set to the streamings site requirement. But Is that meter readings :True peak, Lufs, RMS ?

  • @jelie303
    @jelie303 4 роки тому +1

    Not what I wanted to hear... Kendrick Lamar's songs are waaayyyy louder than mine even on Spotify.

  • @RealHomeRecording
    @RealHomeRecording 4 роки тому +4

    17:35 throwing shade at Rick Rubin ahahaha!!!
    I am happy that music I have mixed and mastered since 2008 has honored Dynamics/maintained transients. My stuff doesn't sound dated because of good practices.

    • @thetruthchannel349
      @thetruthchannel349 4 роки тому

      *Rick Rubin is an idiot. I dont know a single engineer whos worked with him who has anything positive to say about him*

    • @RealHomeRecording
      @RealHomeRecording 4 роки тому +1

      @@Ascoundrel agreed. Rick may be past his prime and make very questionable engineering decisions but to say that he is a bad producer would be incorrect. His portfolio speaks for itself.

  • @wks79
    @wks79 4 роки тому +1

    Amazing explanation! Thank you Justin & Alan!

  • @backwardclock1074
    @backwardclock1074 4 роки тому +5

    As a mix and master engineer, this is a conversation i am continually having with artists. This is a great talk, thank you so much for sharing

  • @Zickcermacity
    @Zickcermacity 2 роки тому +1

    15:40 THIS is what we had since after World War 1. It was called the VU Meter. Zero was about two-thirds up the scale, with a peak positive value anywhere from 6 to 18dB VU, and negative values from -12 to -infinity.
    It was when digital recording began to accompany and ultimately, replace analog recording, and Peak metering replaced RMS, that any semblance of standardized levels went out the window.
    Hopefully, loudness metering(LUFS, or RMS VU meter emulation), will restore that relative normalcy

  • @camilosilva595
    @camilosilva595 3 роки тому +3

    You can tell someone is a true soundengineer when he wears sonic protection on stage while giving a seminar... Thumbs up for him!!

  • @jhorstmann5151
    @jhorstmann5151 4 роки тому +10

    This was an incredible presentation - thanks!!

  • @PettiMusicStudios
    @PettiMusicStudios 4 роки тому +3

    What was that fusion song? That shit was killllleeer

  • @massivebeatzz
    @massivebeatzz 3 роки тому +1

    solution - have the audio engineers associations and artists grab these nerd youtube, spotify balding minion owners or whoever they are (audio noobs for sure) and educate them what's needed - and make them behave under new and proper audio guidance so the circus stops.

  • @misael2649
    @misael2649 4 роки тому +7

    This was so quick but learned so much! I could watch another hour of him talking more in depth

  • @joebrewer4529
    @joebrewer4529 4 роки тому

    Radio is compressed audio. Sounded fine to me.

  • @SeanQuinn4
    @SeanQuinn4 4 роки тому +3

    Coming from a film audio background, I have been using minimal compression in my music projects as well, out of practice and frustration with the modern limited sound, so this gives me some serious hope!

  • @erikerikerikerikerik
    @erikerikerikerikerik 4 роки тому +1

    man right when it was getting really interesting he gets cut off lol

  • @onlyvaccari
    @onlyvaccari 4 роки тому +49

    Damn he was just getting started!! TBProAudio has a legit FREE VU meter!! "MvMeter" your welcome..

    • @QuentinDamour
      @QuentinDamour 4 роки тому +2

      Thank's !

    • @user-lt2rw5nr9s
      @user-lt2rw5nr9s 4 роки тому +2

      How is it compared to Youlean's free meter?

    • @onlyvaccari
      @onlyvaccari 4 роки тому +3

      @@user-lt2rw5nr9s Big difference, Youlean has it right in the name "Loudness Meter" or "Loundness Analyzer" which gives you an in depth look at the overall levels, peaks/True Peaks, LUFS, lets you compare it to other sources like Apple Music, Spotify or UA-cam to match the over all levels/LUFS and so forth. "MvMeter" is a simple accurate meter used to detect VU metering, RMS and peaks (usually no graphs/charts) very helpful for stage gaining and making sure your mixes dont exceed a certain level. Ive never personally used Youlean before instead check out #MeldaProduction for their free 20+ VST bundle which has a very usefully Loudness Analyzer which I use on every master! www.meldaproduction.com/MFreeFXBundle. Your welcome! it never hurts to try them, you can never have too much meters, especially in music.

    • @user-lt2rw5nr9s
      @user-lt2rw5nr9s 4 роки тому +2

      @@onlyvaccari I actually have the free Melda pack, but there's so many plugins in it it's hard to know what you have sometimes. I bet it's less resource intensive too without the graph.

    • @onlyvaccari
      @onlyvaccari 4 роки тому +3

      @@user-lt2rw5nr9s I would recommend going back on Meldas site and read what each of them do as they are very helpful with quality production and not to mention FREE!! And I wouldn't say less resourceful on the Meter as I said they both do two very different things one is a loudness analyzer/meter the other is a regular RMS/VU meter , I use it for Garageband since Garageband has really no metering system its hard to tell whats hitting at what level. Loudness analyzer I would use for a Master to get the right LUFS for Spotify, Apple Music and so forth. Also "maybe" to check short term and long term peaks/levels of a mix. If you have good metering already then this might not be for you but if you meters suck them I would recommend the MvMeter!

  • @doziermuzic
    @doziermuzic 4 роки тому +1

    Hey that was great. Thank you for sharing.

  • @jelguwop299
    @jelguwop299 4 роки тому +4

    Developing the mixing and mastering ear takes time and practice.

  • @snapascrew
    @snapascrew 3 роки тому

    I laughed my ass off at the super super loud youtube ad I got at 23:57 bahaha

  • @jwrxgd
    @jwrxgd 4 роки тому +4

    Amazing! The part where he shows off the different limiters and what they're doing "under the hood" blew my mind. Really helpful stuff, it is always appreciated!!

  • @OpiumZA
    @OpiumZA 4 роки тому +1

    Brilliant

  • @freesouljah
    @freesouljah 4 роки тому +7

    This is golden knowledge and advice!!! Thank you for taking the time to make it available for all of us!! 🤙🏼

  • @christianpomerleau
    @christianpomerleau 3 роки тому

    Very insightful. Thanks!!!

  • @SQUNTO
    @SQUNTO 4 роки тому +43

    VERY LARGE RED PILL

    • @filipesantos9373
      @filipesantos9373 4 роки тому +1

      lol no, good mixin engineers always did this.. i thought loudness meters was made fo exactly this.. wtf.. ???

  • @ThisMichaelBrown
    @ThisMichaelBrown 2 роки тому +1

    Fantastic, thanks! Ahhh, bringing back all that DR and headroom....sweet!

  • @robdixson196
    @robdixson196 4 роки тому +5

    Anyone remember the volume knob? Ahhhh nostalgia.

  • @Dannoneusk91
    @Dannoneusk91 2 місяці тому +1

    To anyone else who has been as obsessed as myself about finding that version of "Swing! Brother, Swing!" It's Catherine Russell. From her album Harlem on my Mind. Listen and soak up the mix and the jazz.

  • @JM-co6rf
    @JM-co6rf 4 роки тому +5

    that should have been 2 hours long

  • @MikeDeanOfficials
    @MikeDeanOfficials 4 роки тому +1

    They are making 10M a day. We are making music. 1 cent a day.

  • @Robert_Babicz
    @Robert_Babicz 4 роки тому +4

    thank you very much for this, as a mastering guy myself, I have the problem that I mostly master DJ music, and DJ's want it loud, but streaming don't need this. so, in the end, we will need to make 2 different masters.

    • @alejandromagana1554
      @alejandromagana1554 4 роки тому +1

      Robert Babicz Stoaked to see you around, you just mastered my album few days ago and I can’t tell you how happy I am to had this done by a true professional 😁 🎶 It sounds super!!!

    • @Robert_Babicz
      @Robert_Babicz 4 роки тому +1

      @@alejandromagana1554 thank you

  • @SamRobson
    @SamRobson 2 роки тому

    Is that a version of Samplitude? Big fan of Samplitude, been using it since SE9

  • @kenhymes4900
    @kenhymes4900 4 роки тому +9

    A must watch for engineers and musicians. stick with it through the history, get to around 17:50, and keep going.

    • @arseniy
      @arseniy 4 роки тому

      What the point? It's rather a history lesson. Nothing helpful for actual mixing or mastering.

    • @jaroslavkorbel8385
      @jaroslavkorbel8385 3 дні тому

      Disagree, the demonstration of what sounds the limiters are actually putting into our tracks that we listen today was fascinating - and frankly - disgusting. I agree with the presenter that listening to this crackling subconsciously affects the listener and the music in a negative way. The end also explains how to effectively improve your music in this environment.

  • @NateCooperino
    @NateCooperino 3 роки тому +1

    Which DAW you use isn't important, it's all about who's sitting in the chair. For example I mastered a record in Audacity and it sounded like total shit.

  • @DollaSignAL
    @DollaSignAL 4 роки тому +14

    This whole thing is “a propaganda war” if you ask me

  • @rick4electric
    @rick4electric 4 роки тому +1

    8:05 - ANOTHER FUCKING LIE! The engineers didn't need to "learn" that they had to discard the equalization necessary to keep the needle tracking the record. The REASON the early CD's sucked is because the producers were too LAZY to take the vinyl equalization OFF the recording BEFORE they mastered it to compact disk! Engineers aren't stupid, but producers think WE ARE!

  • @BoyBlessing
    @BoyBlessing 3 роки тому +3

    Need more from him. Please make another video with him but even longer and showing how we can master

  • @yorkie984
    @yorkie984 4 роки тому +1

    Streaming services have not given mixers/engineers headroom and dynamic range back, it was always there, the audio space was just being abused and now compression and artificial loudness comes with a penalty, suddenly they care again.

    • @lorenzo6mm
      @lorenzo6mm 4 роки тому

      The law suits are coming. The class action suit in which millions could claim
      hearing loss because of all the compression. Those 24/7 ear buds and smart phones
      are finally getting them to stop killing us with loudness.
      Live music these days is the same dynamic. Especially kick drums and bass
      that is felt instead of heard.

  • @AMpr0d
    @AMpr0d 4 роки тому +4

    What a time to be alive gentlemen, this video really gave me a good mood.

  • @WarpedTrekker
    @WarpedTrekker 4 роки тому +1

    Why are studios and audio engineers still compressing music in 2020? Especially on CD/FLAC releases? Look at the Loudness War Database. There are "remastered" CD's in 2020, that have very poor dynamic range, compared to their original release in the early 1980's. When will audio engineers and studios wake up?

  • @annakat03
    @annakat03 4 роки тому +3

    OH WOW. It didnt even feel like 30 mins I thought he was just getting started!!! Agreed with everyone else: we need more of him!

  • @Omkarah
    @Omkarah 4 роки тому +1

    Loudness SUCKS! Dynamic range is the thing!

  • @Phunker1
    @Phunker1 4 роки тому +6

    He's running Sequoia. Good man.

  • @bigdaz7272
    @bigdaz7272 4 роки тому +1

    If you listen to a massive variation of Genres for example in Foobar2000 i must have 100,000+ tracks spanning almost every Genre and i do not apply 'Replay Gain' to said collection it becomes almost un-listenable with the difference in Volume and Dynamic Range as random songs are played, some songs playing 20db+ louder than others.
    Using 'Replay Gain' i would say is mandatory if you wan't to maintain you hearing and not be jumping to adjust the Volume every few songs.

  • @danielkisel5661
    @danielkisel5661 4 роки тому +11

    Wow there are some serious thoughts in this.
    I'm rethinking loudness and looking forward for great, natural sounding music!
    Jaw dropping, thanks!

  • @akumusik3582
    @akumusik3582 2 роки тому +1

    Great One🎼💯

  • @ractorstudios
    @ractorstudios 4 роки тому +12

    Love how we get to hear exactly what the limiter is doing

    • @gregaras5000
      @gregaras5000 4 роки тому

      i think that was clipping not limiting

    • @Creator_Veeto_PAEACP
      @Creator_Veeto_PAEACP 4 роки тому +1

      Gregaras The Greg bahahahaha. What do you think limiters are? You’re squashing a signal which guess what? Creates distortion... not clipping. Distortion does come from clipping but it also comes from saturation, compression, using lots of drive (which is increasing the signal beyond 0db then reduces the loudness so that it doesnt blow your ears and speakers) do you even mix?

    • @gregaras5000
      @gregaras5000 4 роки тому

      @@Creator_Veeto_PAEACP sorry, didn't delete my dumb comment

  • @lahattec
    @lahattec 4 роки тому +1

    Awesome. Thanks!