Don't Make This Loudness LUFS Mistake

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  • Опубліковано 21 тра 2024
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    Loudness for streaming services can be confusing for a lot, and the only thing I can say is: Don't make this loudness LUFS mistake when mastering for streaming services like Spotify.
    I will break this down in this video.
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    ⏰ Timestamps ⏰
    00:00 Introduction
    00:33 Realization of the discrepancy post-mastering
    01:10 Explanation of LUFS measurement types
    02:20 Importance of integrated LUFS for streaming services
    03:33 Impact of mastering at -14 LUFS
    04:11 Understanding integrated LUFS and its implications
    05:23 Practical demonstration using Loudness Penalty Studio
    06:45 How streaming services normalize audio levels
    08:10 Considerations for True Peak level and positive gain
    09:25 Variation in normalization across different platforms
    10:00 Optimal approach to LUFS targeting in mastering
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КОМЕНТАРІ • 158

  • @Accentor100
    @Accentor100 27 днів тому +16

    Thanks Chris, this confirms what I've heard from others as well. I've also had the best luck shooting for -9LUFS

    • @mixdownonline
      @mixdownonline  27 днів тому +3

      It's a nice sweet spot! Thanks for watching :-)

    • @profdraper
      @profdraper 23 дні тому +1

      Specifically, this seems to refer to -9LUFS 'Momentary' as opposed to -14LUFS 'Average' & I think that is the key. I do nearly all of this kind of finishing in Wavelab & which has very detailed tools for this kind of thing. The premasters I send to it are of course much more consevrative than this & exactly as per the requirments for a mastering house.
      In any case, is very easy to see & hear exaclty what's going on in Wavelab and the loudness normalisation tools can be applied in a number of different ways. Certainly, most of the time momentary is the way to go, but sometimes the program content can racially alter this as well and in those cases the average refereence point works well, eg, acoustic, jazz, classical music.

    • @Accentor100
      @Accentor100 23 дні тому

      @@profdraper I work in Wavelab too when I master for the very reasons you stated.

  • @shorerocks
    @shorerocks 27 днів тому +1

    Sound advise. I agree. Thx for doing this.

  • @ChrrZ
    @ChrrZ 27 днів тому +6

    thank you very much for this very informative video!! this cleared up alot of questions in my mind!

  • @hanisiblini
    @hanisiblini 27 днів тому +1

    Love it Chris, well said

  • @DigiMixAudio
    @DigiMixAudio 21 день тому +1

    Works for me;' thanks for the insights and video!

  • @AntonelloNicastro
    @AntonelloNicastro 14 днів тому +1

    It's absolutely right. I did very similar experiments uploading directly on some platforms and reached to the same conclusions and they works well for me 🤗.

  • @Musicalm
    @Musicalm 2 дні тому

    I use the supervision pos on the track with the master plugins and accompany it with another supervision pos on the stereo out. Normally, the supervision pos on the track matches the value you mentioned in the video and on the stereo out pos it matches exactly - 14Lufs integrate. Thanks for the video!

  • @adelphitom
    @adelphitom 22 дні тому +1

    Finally the video I’ve been looking for! Can’t tell you how long I’ve been pondering this issue haha. Thank you for the video

  • @Griuofficial
    @Griuofficial 24 дні тому

    Thanks for the video

  • @Willigrow
    @Willigrow 23 дні тому +4

    Great info. Now lets be real, most commercial releases are at -8 all the way to -5LUFS sometimes. People target -14 and wonder why their stuff sounds smaller and weaker, this is why. My metal mixes are at around -10, and that's before mastering.

    • @machineagevoodoo2106
      @machineagevoodoo2106 22 дні тому +1

      Finally a normal person

    • @gregpastic6910
      @gregpastic6910 21 день тому +1

      The level of your mixes before mastering makes no difference at all. I've mastered mixes that were at -24 integrated LUFS that ended up at -11 or -10 for example. It's your peaks that matter most. Now, if you are compressing and limiting your mix to get it to -10 or so, you should probably not bother mastering the track. If you're using 2 bus compression for flavor or groove, thats ok but don't overdo it. I've received metal mixes that were CRUSHED to -3 or -4 integrated LUFS with an LRA of 1 or 2 db! I requested a mix without the heavy processing, mastered both and sent them as No.1 and No.2 They always choose the version without heavy mix bus processing. We need to stop crushing the life out of music and give it room to breathe. Chasing loudness is a dead end. Exciting dynamics is the goal regardless of the loudness level. Cheers from SoundArtMastering.

    • @ProductionAdvice
      @ProductionAdvice 14 днів тому +1

      You’re right, many mainstream masters are at -8 LUFS or higher. My questions are:
      1 - Did they need to be ?
      2 - Do they sound better as a result ?
      3 - Even when loudness-matched ?

    • @Willigrow
      @Willigrow 14 днів тому

      @@ProductionAdvice I'd say it depends. Some genres probably not. On the other hand I've had clients who literally asked more squashed sound of their death metal tracks, because the master I sent them sounded "too clean". I'm personally somewhere in the middle. I feel -14LUFS is a bit too much headroom, as I do like some compression and limiting on most tracks. However going to these extremes of -7 to -5 is too much.

    • @ProductionAdvice
      @ProductionAdvice 14 днів тому

      @@Willigrow Absolutely I agree - “it depends” is always the right answer.
      But so many people assume that because many major releases have high LUFS, that’s the reason for their sound, which isn’t the case.
      There’s a huge difference between measuring loud and *sounding* loud, which is about so much more than the LUFS measurement, as Chris says.
      It’s about density, intensity, saturation, distortion, compression, clipping, stereo width, arrangement, panning, internal dynamics and so much more.
      I agree that -14 isn’t a useful target, but in my experience neither is -8, -6, or any other value.
      Integrated LUFS is the result, not the goal IMO

  • @QuaverloveStudio
    @QuaverloveStudio 27 днів тому

    Thanks, Chris.

  • @BelovedChild
    @BelovedChild 18 днів тому

    Hy Chris
    Thank you for this wonderful Video! I understand your video this way: If I master in Cubase 13 ( not in Wavelab this I dont have) and there in Cubase my momentary max is -9 , but because of the dynamic it shows -14 Integrated Lufs for the whole song and I want to give it to Spotify then it`s ok? Or shall my momentary max go to - 8?
    I compose Popsongs: Strings Voice Piano Guitar Drums.

  • @Relvoet
    @Relvoet 27 днів тому +3

    Nice penalty plugin, didnt know that yt doesnt gain quieter stuff, that is defenately one to take into consideration for the next project.

  • @foundpat
    @foundpat 26 днів тому +1

    Hi Chris, new sub here and getting back into cubase after many years on logic. Quick question Is there a way to identify, to see the quantization settings used in particular event. In logic when i move to a different track it shows you what quantize setting was used.

  • @tstsmusic
    @tstsmusic 18 днів тому

    At first... I've thought I've been watching the very beginning of the movie Total Recall with Arnold Schwarzenegger, then... I've seen Chris' face, Thanks God! Chris is still on the Earth!

  • @JimCPettigrew
    @JimCPettigrew 26 днів тому +1

    Thanks for posting - so whats your advice for anyone uploading a track to DistroKid of CDBaby etc?

    • @gregpastic6910
      @gregpastic6910 21 день тому

      (I posted this above)
      Please, don't AIM for a specific LUFS level. Each genre, each track, requires a different mastering approach to get the desired result. (Notice I said 'desired result' because it's always subjective.) Pay attention to how much limiting you are applying. Some tracks will need very little compression and limiting to make them sound good. Use your ears and always use good reference tracks of a similar genre or style. If your track ends up sounding great and hits -11.6 integrated LUFS with a TP of -1.4 that's cool. If it ends up sounding great at -9.2 with a TP of -0.4 that's fine too! If it sounds great at -14 with a TP of -1.8 go with it! Don't become meter-blind. I've measured hundreds of commercial tracks by top engineers and they NEVER aim for a specific loudness target. USE YOUR EARS. Then use the metering options to confirm (!) that your TP is ok. But don't master your track by following numbers on meters. It takes more time and experience to be able to do this consistently and get good results but it's worth the effort. Cheers from SoundArtMastering!

  • @andrefavreau9818
    @andrefavreau9818 27 днів тому

    C'est drôle, depuis hier, j'étudiais justement ça et je me demandais si tu avais pas une vidéo là-dessus. J'ai même pris la tune d'Andréanne que tu as mixé pour voir comment tu l'avais fait à l'époque et tu étais en passant à -11.7 integrated. J'ai aussi regardé le même site que toi. C'est spécial que tu sortes une vidéo aujourd'hui.

  • @thaexception3406
    @thaexception3406 27 днів тому +1

    Comprehensive view of this topic

  • @marcel_max
    @marcel_max 27 днів тому

    I noticed that quite a while ago. Now I always export with a bit of limiting then use another software to adjust the master file level at -14dBFS. Très bonne idée de partager ceci. Bonne journée!

  • @raghavyadav1544
    @raghavyadav1544 25 днів тому

    Hey Chris, I usually set my markers at the start and end of the song and the do a render with zero limiting and true peak at -1 using pro-L2.
    Like your example, if the integrated value is - 16.9 I'll actually increase the gain by 2.9 db.
    This gives a - 14 LUFS value on the final render.
    Is this incorrect in anyway?

    • @ProductionAdvice
      @ProductionAdvice 23 дні тому +1

      Not wrong but I recommend you add the gain while working on the file to make sure you like the sound of the limiting. Otherwise you have to check after the render, adjust and measure again, then maybe repeat...

  • @echomusicswe
    @echomusicswe 27 днів тому

    Good Tips and Tricks, but a little confusing! it's just volume! Right? And it all comes down to how I want the dynamics in a song? What If I want very wide range of dynamics? eg a reggae song that's very dynamic, soft playing.

    • @mixdownonline
      @mixdownonline  27 днів тому +2

      Honestly, if you aim at around -12lufs to -11lufs on louder parts, chances are you will be around -14lufs intergraded, and that's plenty of dynamics...experiment, and see :-)

  • @ifix4u2
    @ifix4u2 27 днів тому

    This is quite a bit off subject. Looking for a bit of advice. I am currently using Cubase 10.5 Pro. I am going to upgrade to Cubase 13. Should I uninstall 10.5 before I Install Cubase 13? Q.2 Can I install some of the additional files that come with Cubase on a different drive, as I don't have a lot of space left on my C: drive? Appreciate any advice you might be able to offer!!

    • @ifix4u2
      @ifix4u2 27 днів тому

      actually found a different video you did that answered Q 2. Still wondering about Q 1.

    • @bcrox
      @bcrox 27 днів тому

      You do not need to uninstall Cubase 10.5. You can leave it so you can use it if need be to access older plugins or projects you don't want to save as Cubase 13 files... Cubase 13 makes it a pain to install applications to any drive other than C:. Its manually possible for some, but a pain & a mess. However, after Cubase 13 is installed, you can use "Steinberg Library Manager " (found in your start menu) to move large sample libraries from Groove Agent, HALion Sonic, Iconica Sketch, Verve etc. to another drive. I would recommend getting a larger C: drive, they are dirt cheep these days and it takes no time at all to clone your entire system over. A clogged / full C: drive will slow down Cubase.

    • @mixdownonline
      @mixdownonline  27 днів тому +1

      To answer Q1, you don't have to uninstall C10.5, just install C13, and you will have access to both versions :-)

    • @ifix4u2
      @ifix4u2 27 днів тому

      Thank You!😊

  • @chriskemp466
    @chriskemp466 13 днів тому

    So are you saying using loudest part of the song work with the short-term LUFS so that you are taking more account of the true-peak level which will be what determines how much streaming platforms can increase your loudness?

  • @trackquestmusic
    @trackquestmusic 27 днів тому

    Hi Chris, I’m a little confused because short term LUFS has always been the right way to measure for streaming loudness. I don’t know if somebody told you that integrated was the right way? It’s not.

    • @mixdownonline
      @mixdownonline  27 днів тому +2

      Intergraded LUFS is what Streaming services normalize to. Like I show in the video, I use Short Term, but not at -14 LUFS, and that's the point of this video. Now, you know short term is what's best to use when mastering, I know it, but lots of people are confused about this, that's why I made a video.

    • @gregpastic6910
      @gregpastic6910 21 день тому

      According to Spotify they use the integrated LUFS -14 measurement, not short term LUFS. It's used for single tracks and albums. So when a mastering engineer puts an album together they can adjust each track's loudness to suit the flow, and Spotify will not change that. They normalize the ENTIRE album to -14 integrated LUFS. So your loudest song may very well be louder than -14. Even more confusion eh? LOL I wish we had standards like the film and TV industries do. It would make our lives so much easier, and it would make our deliveries to the consumer platforms simpler and our music better!

  • @siggidori
    @siggidori 25 днів тому

    So the peak level of the -16.9 LUFS master was at -4.3 dBTP?
    If you'd turn it up to full scale (0 dBFS) it would be - 12,6 LUFS.
    Or -13,6 LUFS if peak normalized to -1 dBFS/dBTP.

    • @mixdownonline
      @mixdownonline  25 днів тому +1

      The way this version was processed, yes.

  • @Revontuletband
    @Revontuletband 26 днів тому +2

    Most professional symphonic metal releases from recent years have integrated loudness of around -8 to -6 lufs, so it's very style dependent.

    • @mixdownonline
      @mixdownonline  26 днів тому +1

      It's style dependant, yes. But I will not sacrifice sound quality for more loudness

    • @Revontuletband
      @Revontuletband 26 днів тому

      @@mixdownonline no need to get so defensive about it😁 It's just a fact. As you said yourself, not all platforms can lift the loudness if your mix is quieter than others, and some platforms don't have loudness normalization at all. So if a person listens to a mix mastered to -13 lufs after a professional one (!!!) in the same genre that's up to -6 lufs, the quieter mix would just sound weak especially in more aggressive genres. For example, I listen to various symphonic metal artists on VK music and it doesn't have any normalization (at least not in a browser version, same as the browser version of Spotify, btw). And I can't really listen to the latest album by Nightwish (one of the biggest bands in this genre!) because it's mastered to something like -14 -12 lufs, while other bands in this niche have albums mastered to -8 -6 lufs, as I said before. So it's the same thing as 20 years ago, with cranking up one song and lowering another after it blasts your ears off

    • @ProductionAdvice
      @ProductionAdvice 24 дні тому

      Please can you share a link to some of the examples you’re thinking of ?
      I completely understand that on platforms with no moralisation, quieter stuff won’t stand up as well, but based on the numbers I’ve found, those platforms are in the minority (

    • @Revontuletband
      @Revontuletband 24 дні тому

      @@ProductionAdvice as I said, my main concern is for platforms with NO normalization. And, again, even Spotify and Apple Music web browser players DON'T have it. It's reason enough for me to have my masters be as loud as the competition, though again, it's style dependent. If you want specific examples in symphonic metal, try listening to a song from Nightwish's "Human Nature" album between, for instance, latest tracks by Whithin Temptation or Xandria in either Spotify or Apple web versions.

    • @ProductionAdvice
      @ProductionAdvice 24 дні тому

      @@Revontuletband I totally get your point that you’re concerned about masters not being loud enough on platforms with no normalisation, but they do only account for less than 20% of the audience. Most people use Spotify & Apple on mobile or desktop - personally I’ve literally never used a browser player, for example.
      Thanks for the suggestions, I’ll check them out. So if a track by Nightwish comes on, you just skip it ?

  • @NEEDSHES
    @NEEDSHES 27 днів тому

    Oh gosh I've been watching till I heard the music😄😄😄

  • @JayYarbroughMusic
    @JayYarbroughMusic 27 днів тому +20

    Great info (as always) but I feel artists need to once and for all dump Spotify.

  • @le_beatbox
    @le_beatbox 27 днів тому

    Non seulement ça, mais quand Spotify gain up ton mix, ils appliquent aussi un limiter pour que ça ne dépasse pas -1 avec leur gain. Je préfère être celui qui est en contrôle du limiting final quand je fais un master, pas l'algo!

    • @mixdownonline
      @mixdownonline  26 днів тому +1

      En fait. Spotify n'applique pas de limiter pour les masters sous les -14lufs, Spotify normalize à -1dbtp. Comme dans mon example dans la vidéo, une des versions étais à -17lufs avec un True Peak de -1.8 dbtp, donc Spotify à normalisé cette version de 0.8 dbtp pour arriver à -1dbtp. Donc au final, cette version se termine à -16.5lufs sur Spotify après normalization.

    • @le_beatbox
      @le_beatbox 26 днів тому

      @@mixdownonline c’est vrai, mais je suis allé vérifier, sur spotify tu peux changer les levels de normalisation à -23 ou -11 LUFS et à -11 ils utilisent un limiter (pas avec les autres options) eh ben.

  • @VietKaraoke8893
    @VietKaraoke8893 27 днів тому

    If I go to UA-cam, will it automatically re-balance the lufs?

    • @mixdownonline
      @mixdownonline  27 днів тому +2

      UA-cam Music will normalize louder masters to -14lufs, but will not bring up quieter matters like Spotify does.

  • @CaptainProton1
    @CaptainProton1 15 днів тому

    -8LUFS for non dance electronica for me seems to be the sweet spot

  • @Stormsurf001
    @Stormsurf001 26 днів тому

    Good video - but let me provide some more context - If say in Spotify you have the 'Normalize Volume' option turned 'ON', then all songs played will be at -14 LUFS. But if you turn Normalize Volume 'OFF', all songs will be played at the native volume they were mastered at. And with the OFF option selected (at least in the rock genre) you will find most songs typically running in the -8 to -7 LUFS range if not louder. The loudness wars are still alive and well. With Normalize Volume turned off you are now listening to the song the way the artist intended.
    Part 2 of this discussion is: But how many people even understand that the Normalize Volume option exists? I've read that about 17% of people turn the Normalize Volume function 'off' in Spotify. So the question them becomes, What volume should you master too? Should you gamble that most people will use Volume Normalization? And then consider what apps like Tidal do, where they are trying to give you the raw, native full resolution listening experience. If you master to -14, your song will get passed over because it will present so quiet to be mostly unlistenable compared to other songs in that genre. It's your decision but like Chris says, I wouldn't master to -14 LUFS. .

    • @mixdownonline
      @mixdownonline  26 днів тому

      Normalization is ON by default on streaming services, so most people don't even know you can turn it OFF, and don't care. And by listening to a loud lufs master normalized to -14lufs, is just like using a volume knob to turn down the volume, normalizing will not remove all the compression, clipping, and limiting the artist used to make it loud in the first place. You will just listen to the song the way the artist intended, loud, but at a lower volume.
      My take is I don't care much about how loud other productions ends up at. I master it as loud that I think acceptable without sacrificing the sound quality.
      Thanks for your comment, my friend :-)

    • @Stormsurf001
      @Stormsurf001 26 днів тому

      ​@@mixdownonlineOh yeah - I totally agree with your position of mastering to make it sound good, not to a LUFS target. But with all the back and forth on the interwebs about the -14 LUFS target, it took me forever to 'get' what Spotify was 'really' saying when they posted that target. Now I get it, and it's all about volume normalization. I've literally never heard anyone actually say that's where the -14 LUFS number came from. So I thought I'd share that little nugget. Thanks again for all your great work!

    • @gregpastic6910
      @gregpastic6910 21 день тому

      Sorry, I disagree totally with your assertion that turning off normalization allows you to hear the song "the way the artist intended." Raising or lowering the gain does not change what the artist intended in any way. If you want it louder, turn it up. Remember that LUFS is an internal measurement. You can't say to a consumer "Please listen to my album at -10 LUFS to hear what I intended." What you could say is "listen to my album at ear-splitting levels as I intended." LUFS levels mean nothing to the consumer.

    • @Stormsurf001
      @Stormsurf001 21 день тому

      @@gregpastic6910 Fair enough. But if an artist masters a song at any volume, and they bought off as the master as being 'acceptable', then it IS as they intended. Certainly, Spotify, Apple Music or whatever music streaming service you chose purposefully turning the volume down is not as the artist intended. It is as Spotify intended. All that aside, and to your point, turning the volume down doesn't change the song or how it feels. But I think it's all about playlist management. That is, some users want all their songs in a playlist to all be at the same volume. And that's certainly a nice feature for some users. But I don't need it nor want it. I like my music provided raw/native. To each their own. But, for me, I found the whole -14 LUFS thing totally confusing cause I never had volume normalization turned on. And I was listening to my songs and songs from playlisted artists and finding most everything was in the -7 to -8 LUFS range. Hence the confusion about 1) what as the source of -14 LUFS target and 2) why no one was actually mastering to it. Now I know, and I just wanted to share what I learned. Literally no one on you tube or wherever talks about the source of the -14 LUFS target. They just say streaming services 'turn your music down' but don't ever say what that actually means. Now I know. If you buy a CD or an album, I guarantee the music won't be at streaming levels.

    • @gregpastic6910
      @gregpastic6910 21 день тому

      @@Stormsurf001 I understand you are still learning, and I don't mean to sound critical. But you don't seem to understand that if Spotify turns your music down all your listener has to do is turn it back up. Nothing has been changed.
      I also disagree with your statement that "...turning the volume down doesn't change the song or how it feels." Our entire perception of dynamics and frequency response changes as volume is turned up and down. If you mix a track at 60 db
      c-weighted average and then listen to it at 80 db you will be shocked at the difference. That's why all pro mix and mastering engineers have usually just two volume levels to work at that are measured at the listening position with a decibel meter.
      But the consumer has to manage volume changes all the time as they struggle to hear music in the car, in the busy street, on the train...but they are NOT critical listeners so it doesn't matter. Cheers and keep on learning by asking questions. 🙂

  • @jordiguzman
    @jordiguzman 26 днів тому

    Have you done a measurement with certain songs on Spotify? LUFS calmly go up to -8dB and even more. I don't know if you are aware of this...

    • @mixdownonline
      @mixdownonline  26 днів тому +1

      When normalized, which is ON by default on Spotify, all songs are played at the same loudness level. If you have songs where this is not the case, send the song title my way :-)

    • @jordiguzman
      @jordiguzman 24 дні тому

      @@mixdownonline
      St Vincent - Flea -6.6 Integrated

    • @jordiguzman
      @jordiguzman 24 дні тому

      @@mixdownonline I try to give you an answer but the comment is deleted...

    • @mixdownonline
      @mixdownonline  24 дні тому

      @@jordiguzman weird, I didn't see any other comments 🤔

    • @jordiguzman
      @jordiguzman 23 дні тому

      @@mixdownonline For example Flea of St. Vincent

  • @damirvucic
    @damirvucic 27 днів тому +2

    I do a lot of hip hop. My masters are at -9 sometimes i am able to go even louder at -8db without my mix beginning to bend. The perceived loudness will be louder sounding because of the highly compressed file even after spotify, UA-cam or whatever platform lowers the volume.

    • @mixdownonline
      @mixdownonline  27 днів тому +2

      Yes, that's a thing, and subtle when it happens, but it depends on the production. I hear that perceived difference mainly in quieter parts of a song, if that happens, but in my example in the video, there's no loudness differences between the tracks normalized.

    • @ZoomRmc
      @ZoomRmc 23 дні тому

      Unfortunately, this is a misconception. Your track with a LUFS level exceeding the platform's threshold *will* sound quieter overall after normalization. Depending on the amount of compression and the way the dynamics are treated, the quieter parts will possibly get closer to the loudest parts of the track, but this is a result (a trade-off) of robbing the loudest parts of the potential sound pressure that gets cut off by normalization.

    • @mixdownonline
      @mixdownonline  22 дні тому

      @@ZoomRmc Actually, normalization done by streaming services doesn't add "cut off" processing, but brings to volume down to whatever lufs level they use. I assume you're referring to the processing made during mastering?

    • @ZoomRmc
      @ZoomRmc 22 дні тому

      ​@@mixdownonline of course, I meant the results of mastering or mixing (though wording is a bit off).
      Going above the loudness threshold is what cuts off the available range.Past hitting your peak threshold (be it 0dB or lower) you inevitably need to squash the dynamics to get louder results for the same material (not tweaking the EQ or saturation). If you exceed the platform's normalization threshold in the process you're essentially just cutting of the peaks during the loudest parts of your track. Those parts will inevitably sound quieter, and although potentially introduced distortion during dynamic processing might offset the perceived loudness decrease slightly, this effect is almost always gets overshadowed by the sheer effect of the level shifting down by normalization.
      This isn't bad per se, but in my experience there's a general tendency to overrate "fat", "dense" and "weighty" and undervalue "punchy", "hard-hitting", "breathing", etc.

    • @mixdownonline
      @mixdownonline  22 дні тому

      @@ZoomRmc In my experience, I don't hear a difference in perceived loudness between a loud master and a -14lufs after normalization, appart from quieter parts that sometimes, can be perceived a bit louder. However ,I agree with you with the side effects of over limited loud masters, and undervaluing "punchy", "hard-hitting", "breathing", etc...Totally agree with that :-)

  • @gregpastic6910
    @gregpastic6910 21 день тому +1

    Please, don't AIM for a specific LUFS level. Each genre, each track, requires a different mastering approach to get the desired result. (Notice I said 'desired result' because it's always subjective.) Pay attention to how much limiting you are applying. Some tracks will need very little compression and limiting to make them sound good. Use your ears and always use good reference tracks of a similar genre or style. If your track ends up sounding great and hits -11.6 integrated LUFS with a TP of -1.4 that's cool. If it ends up sounding great at -9.2 with a TP of -0.4 that's fine too! If it sounds great at -14 with a TP of -1.8 go with it! Don't become meter-blind. I've measured hundreds of commercial tracks by top engineers and they NEVER aim for a specific loudness target. USE YOUR EARS. Then use the metering options to confirm (!) that your TP is ok. But don't master your track by following numbers on meters. It takes more time and experience to be able to do this consistently and get good results but it's worth the effort. Cheers from SoundArtMastering!

    • @mixdownonline
      @mixdownonline  21 день тому

      Cannot agree more! Thanks for your input!

  • @___David___Savian
    @___David___Savian День тому

    Just do the following and don't overcomplicate life with LUF and all that other BS.
    Just put ALL your levels at minus six decibels and don't render the project of song through its crazy DAW filtering funnel. Just bounce it as a LIVE take as it plays. Reaper DAW has that feature. It is called >>> Save Live Output To Disk

  • @studioapollo9781
    @studioapollo9781 26 днів тому

    The loudness war is not over. The major labels have agreements with streaming companies and provide volume benefits for their contracted bands. You're a free artist, you're out of luck, you'll be quieter. Fortunately, we have a few tricks to break it.

    • @mixdownonline
      @mixdownonline  26 днів тому

      Not sure that's accurate, but if you have songs you know that are louder with normalization ON, feel free to send names my way

    • @ProductionAdvice
      @ProductionAdvice 24 дні тому +1

      ^^ Chris is right, I’ve been watching this for years and never seen any evidence of “loudness for money”

  • @blindcamel6236
    @blindcamel6236 19 днів тому

    so I can just add a bit of silence to the end of the song to bring down the average lufs of the whole song?

    • @ProductionAdvice
      @ProductionAdvice 14 днів тому

      No, the integrated value ignores very low levels, so this won’t affect the result

  • @gregpastic6910
    @gregpastic6910 21 день тому

    One more important thing: if you deliver a track to a streaming service that normalizes loudness to -14 and -1.0 TP and YOUR track is -16 with a TP of say -1.0 they will apply a BRICK WALL limiter when they bring your integrated -16.0 up to -14.0 because your TP is now +1.0 with the additional 2 db of gain applied by the streaming service. Do you want them to apply brick wall limiting to your track, smashing your transients? NOOOOOO! So if you deliver a track below -14.0 integrated LUFS make sure your TP leaves room to allow for loudness normalization without triggering their limiting. Cheers again from SoundArtMastering.

    • @mixdownonline
      @mixdownonline  21 день тому +1

      Not sure how it's done on other services, but in this scenario, Spotify will gain up to -1TP without limiting, so if your master is at -16lufs -1TP, it will stay at -16lufs after normalization, so nothing would change.I think its the same with Apple, and UA-cam music will not normalize upward at all. I pointed that out in my video. That's when using their App, might be different using the browser version, who knows. :-)

    • @gregpastic6910
      @gregpastic6910 21 день тому

      @@mixdownonline Oh thanks, that must have changed then? I know from other mastering engineers that brick wall limiters are used by some streaming services if they raise the gain of your track to avoid peak distortion when converting to lossy formats. If Spotify only raises the TP to -1.0 as their yardstick then you are right, your track could be quieter than others. Confusing even for those of us with experience!

    • @ProductionAdvice
      @ProductionAdvice 14 днів тому +1

      Chris is correct, Spotify don’t do this any more *except* when the user chooses the “loud” setting in the preferences. Even then it only happens for songs below -11 LUFS, and it’s only available to subscribers.
      None of the other streaming services do this, and Spotify doesn’t do it by default (and only 17% of users change the defaults in any way)

    • @gregpastic6910
      @gregpastic6910 14 днів тому

      @@ProductionAdvice Thanks Ian. It seems the streaming services change their specs as technology and listener preferences change, but only under pressure LOL. I know Bob K has had many discussions with Spotify to establish some kind of standard. I wish we had standards like the movie and TV industry does. A good friend who does foley for big productions (Vikings, Chappie, Bladerunner 2049) laughs at the total lack of any standards in the music industry. The struggle continues! Cheers from Gregory at SoundArtMastering in the Cowichan Valley.

  • @Tiomofee
    @Tiomofee 25 днів тому +1

    Why don`t you guys stick to the EBU regulations? You are still fighting the loudness war and losing dynamic range by doing so. EBU is -18dB LUFS integrated. Otherwise when using the streaming platforms aim at what these platforms want to have, not more not less. This means, of course, you have to render several specific masters.

    • @tracktaylor2783
      @tracktaylor2783 23 дні тому

      Im on the frontline bro!

    • @Tiomofee
      @Tiomofee 23 дні тому

      @@tracktaylor2783 Thanx, Chris, for reacting to my post. That`s become rare nowadays. ;-)

  • @victorbicudo1374
    @victorbicudo1374 27 днів тому

    i'd rather master at -11 and take the penalty than risking being quiet at the end of the process. been there, done that.

  • @Renegade3746
    @Renegade3746 18 днів тому

    -7luffs!!!

  • @Sol-In-Seoul
    @Sol-In-Seoul 27 днів тому

    I don’t see the problem. Mastering to -14 LUFS (yes, of course meaning the loudness of the entire piece of music) works just fine. Been doing it for years! We have highs and lows, and we play with that to hit the average. Sounds way better, and louder, back-to-back vs -9 crushed stuff. LUFS ends the volume war crap, and is really a blessing.

    • @mixdownonline
      @mixdownonline  27 днів тому +4

      No, there's no problem to aim for a -14lufs integrated master, the problem I see a lot is to master at -14lufs without knowing the differences betweek lufs intergrated and short term, and ending up with a quiter master than -14lufs :-)

  • @alanredversangel
    @alanredversangel 27 днів тому

    Make your mind up you lot.

    • @mixdownonline
      @mixdownonline  26 днів тому

      ?

    • @alanredversangel
      @alanredversangel 26 днів тому

      @@mixdownonline Seems like no one can agree on how to achieve this?

    • @ProductionAdvice
      @ProductionAdvice 24 дні тому

      I agree with Chris 🙂 Loudest sections at -10, maybe -9, True Peaks at -1 and balance everything else musically 👍

  • @MrTusaProduction
    @MrTusaProduction 25 днів тому

    Fake news! You really think Taylor Swift uses -14? :D No, its like -8, -7 she makes! Spotify normalizes to -14LUFS you can make your songs so loud you want!

    • @mixdownonline
      @mixdownonline  25 днів тому

      What's fake news? You clearly didn't watch the video

    • @richiefamus8778
      @richiefamus8778 24 дні тому

      You can make it -6 if you want and yes they will lower it. Problem is, if you would’ve just mastered at -14 your master would’ve sounded much better

    • @TransistorLSD
      @TransistorLSD 11 днів тому

      ​@@richiefamus8778 It depends on how you mix. If you use enough saturation & distortion for your style of music during mixing, then yes, there's no need to go above -14 LUFS. However, if your mix lacks needed distortion, lots of limiting might give you that desired effect.

  • @pejmanjamilpanah3678
    @pejmanjamilpanah3678 27 днів тому

    I don't change any Spotify settings in my computer browser - I don't activate or deactivate anything. This way, I can hear the maximum volume of mastered music, both my own and my friends.
    So I don't believe that Spotify brings the loudness down. This idea is just talk and theory. To test this, play some industrial music (good one) from Spotify and monitor the loudness directly through a plugin. This way, you can both hear and see it for yourself. There's a lot of misinformation about this on the internet. I don't mean your video specifically, but most of the information out there isn't accurate. Things like low-cutting vocals are absolutely wrong and spread further misinformation. Ugh, yes, low-cutting vocals is bad advice!

    • @mixdownonline
      @mixdownonline  27 днів тому +1

      The "normalize audio" feature on Spotify is active by default, unless you turn off yourself in the settings. Spotify does normalize audio, it's not a theory, but a fact support.spotify.com/us/artists/article/loudness-normalization/

    • @mixdownonline
      @mixdownonline  27 днів тому

      Why is adding a low cut filter to a vocal bad advice exactly?

    • @ProductionAdvice
      @ProductionAdvice 27 днів тому +1

      Just to confirm what Chris is saying - loudness-matching (normalization) is enabled by default in Spotify, and I've been told that fewer than 17% of users change this setting. So most people hear reduced level on louder masters. On UA-cam this can't be disabled, and they have over 80% of the users...!

    • @pejmanjamilpanah3678
      @pejmanjamilpanah3678 27 днів тому

      @@mixdownonline While the fundamental frequency of the human voice doesn't extend into very low frequencies, its harmonics can still be perceived in that range. To achieve a warm vocal sound, consider selectively boosting some of these low-end harmonics rather than cutting them entirely. so the music will sound much warmer, and listening to it at high volume will not cause ear fatigue.
      Here you hear a vocal that is not only low cut but also amplified
      ua-cam.com/video/BLWGDY38gtE/v-deo.htmlsi=AXBkK7mINJZkshfA

    • @mixdownonline
      @mixdownonline  26 днів тому

      @@ProductionAdvice That's good insights Ian, thanks!

  • @Darfoulds
    @Darfoulds 27 днів тому

    I love your vids mate but I feel you got it wrong on this one, to compete with other mainstream artists and depending on style of music most of my electronic genre releases have to be at -6 (ish) lufs, otherwise they are definitely quieter

    • @mixdownonline
      @mixdownonline  27 днів тому

      Where was I wrong exactly? No, they don't "have" to be at -6lufs, you choose to master at that level, and that's fine, if it's sounds good to you, but streaming services will bring it down so all music will sound approximately to the same loudness, like shown in this video.

    • @Darfoulds
      @Darfoulds 27 днів тому

      @@mixdownonline wrong in the sense of my experience uploading to streaming and then hearing the volume difference between tracks at -6 and -14

    • @mixdownonline
      @mixdownonline  27 днів тому +2

      @@Darfoulds Thta's when you turn off normalization on streaming that is ON by default. In that case you will hear a difference, but even then, I think the loudness competition argument is overrated. I always master for the benifit of the song, not the "competitors"...
      Loudness will not make or break your production.

  • @luklagrande
    @luklagrande 27 днів тому

    Or just use Reaper ❤❤

    • @mixdownonline
      @mixdownonline  27 днів тому +1

      Reaper is great, but how would that help with loudness exactly?

    • @mixdownonline
      @mixdownonline  27 днів тому

      Reaper is great, but how would that help with loudness exactly?

    • @luklagrande
      @luklagrande 23 дні тому

      @@mixdownonline hey man thanks for replying me! 🤘
      Reaper has some cool feature which I find very useful when I must check loudness, levels, etc....
      besides having all the info when you render a file (LUFS, Peaks, etc) you can make a "dry run" render, that means no file is saved. This render is very fast so for example you can check the Integrated LUFS without having to listen to the whole song (ike you mention in the video 😅).
      Also, still when rendering, you can choose to normalize the exported file to a certain LUFS level and also limit to a certain peak...this is also useful to check which parts of the song would be considered too loud or too quiet
      there''s also other useful option for mono checking etc, but I think the ones I described above are the most useful about this topic ☺

    • @mixdownonline
      @mixdownonline  23 дні тому +1

      @@luklagrande that's pretty handy, thanks for the info 👍😀

    • @luklagrande
      @luklagrande 22 дні тому

      @@mixdownonline thanks to you!!!! ^_^

  • @Durkhead
    @Durkhead 26 днів тому

    Make it as loud as you can without sacrificing sound quality

  • @dennislacroix9962
    @dennislacroix9962 27 днів тому +6

    Meanwhile the latest releases by Olivia Rodrigo or The Rolling Stones are mastared at an integrated -6 to -5 LUFS.
    Keep on mastering at -14 if you want to sound like an amateur.

    • @mixdownonline
      @mixdownonline  27 днів тому +10

      Sorry, but I'been producing, mixing, and mastering for a living for more than 20 years, and let me assure you that an amateur sound has nothing to do with loudness

    • @Y42
      @Y42 27 днів тому

      word.

    • @bill-sr1vd
      @bill-sr1vd 27 днів тому +2

      In 2024, mastering for streaming to -5 LUFS is stupid. Streaming services will make sure nobody hears it that loud.

  • @bill-sr1vd
    @bill-sr1vd 27 днів тому

    At 4:10 you say you measure the loudest part of the song. That's your mistake. You even spend the rest of the video saying that's a mistake 🙂

    • @mixdownonline
      @mixdownonline  27 днів тому +1

      Yes, that's the point of the video, showing a mistake lots of people do, and give you the solution to it :-)

  • @whitex4652
    @whitex4652 22 дні тому

    It's "integrated", not "integraded". As to be seen in Supervision.

    • @mixdownonline
      @mixdownonline  21 день тому

      Is that what you got from the video? Sorry for my French!