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SurfGuitar101 Forums » Recording Corner »

Permalink The Loudness War - any thoughts?

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I found this short video on "The Loudness War" interesting because when I home record I'm always fighting the balance between making it as 'loud as possible' without clipping it or compromising it...but it needs to be heard too...

Have a look here (it goes for 1.53 min) I'd be very interested in your experiences with this:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3Gmex_4hreQ

(I found this link on Jim Moginie's MySpace page: http://www.myspace.com/jimmoginieandthefamilydog)

Tim O
oestmann guitar

tunes

clips

Obviously a big mistake that has become necessary to compete in the industry.

Tim,
First, there is no reason for you to get anywhere near clipping during the recording stage. That "loudness-war" stuff happens during mastering.
I have to admit is pretty depressing for me when I have submitted a PDM track for a compilation and it is so quiet compared to other songs. We always master with plenty of headroom, if you want to hear it louder, turn it up. But, now, if we submit a track for a comp, we remaster it a bit "louder", though it pains me to do so.
Didn't everybody slam Metallica's new album for being over-mastered?
Ferenc

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JakeDobner
Obviously a big mistake that has become necessary to compete in the industry.

See, that is such a joke. The industry is failing now. People don't want to listen to music, it's too harsh!
I think Tom Petty's last CD was released two ways, one mastered in the style of the old RIAA curve for LPs, and the other super-loud.

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The over-mastered sound does get on my nerves. I haven't heard the Metallica album, but anything from recent Red Hot Chilli Peppers albums is compressed so much that the wave looks like a housebrick. The result is initially impressive but quickly tiring. They are not in the minority here, but it isn't a game that everyone plays: the Robert Plant/ Alison Krauss album wasn't like it for example.

What I find most surprising about it, is that people record something and then master it this way which actually completely changes the sound-choices they made during that recording. The snare sound in that video clip is a perfect example: the mastering has suppressed the attack and then turned up the ambience on it to such a point that it's a totally different sound. This means that a lot of the sounds on records end up being the accidental result of the mastering rather than a consciously selected sound.

It's a symptom of a wider malaise though: no-one cares about sound quality any more. This is the age of the mp3 and the 'X-tra bass' boost button. To buy anything with a hi-fi sound requires a trip to a specialist shop with a lot of cash. Blu Ray can deliver totally uncompressed wav files at 24/96 and nobody gives a toss - whereas at one time folk would have been ecstatic about such a significant improvement over CD.

That's the way it is, attitudes to music and the way its 'consumed' have changed. Also, don't forget that even if you ignore the trend when you record your CD, if it's played on a sizeable radio station it will be passed through a device called an Optimod - an expensive computerised device that is cleverly designed to make all the records they play sound the same. If multi-band compression and aural excitation is missing from your recording it will be supplied for you anyway ....

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estreet
Also, don't forget that even if you ignore the trend when you record your CD, if it's played on a sizeable radio station

Luckily, most surf bands don't have to worry about this!

What was the deal with the Metallica CD?- It was square-wave mastered and it sucked, but then a more natural mastering job came on the version supplied with Guitar Hero, so people started to make bootlegs of the Guitar Hero audio? That aught to make Lars' head spin.

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estreet
...
It's a symptom of a wider malaise though: no-one cares about sound quality any more. This is the age of the mp3 ....

Estreet, you might appreciate Jim Moginies blog about this. He was one of the guitarist/keyboard/genuises from Australian band "Midnight Oil". He writes about the "file" and what it means for music HERE

Tim O
oestmann guitar

tunes

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estreet
It's a symptom of a wider malaise though: no-one cares about sound quality any more. This is the age of the mp3 and the 'X-tra bass' boost button. To buy anything with a hi-fi sound requires a trip to a specialist shop with a lot of cash. Blu Ray can deliver totally uncompressed wav files at 24/96 and nobody gives a toss - whereas at one time folk would have been ecstatic about such a significant improvement over CD.
.

There are some classical recordings on blu-ray. I haven't checked them out. I have some SACDs that sound amazing. It seems only classical music aficionados care about sound quality these days. Tons of great lossless rips on the internet, higher quality than vinyl albums, etc... And somebody company is putting out 128khz recordings. They are only digital, but that is the highest quality you can buy at so far. I haven't heard any of those myself.

Digital is the future, and it will probably forever be known as MP3s. But digital can sound amazing. I think when 2TB(maybe more) hard drives are common that we are going to see a lot more HD audio and overall digital distribution.

As a rule of thumb I delete all music that makes me reach for the volume knob to turn down. If I want to turn it up that’s a good sign.

The Exotic Guitar of Kahuna Kawentzmann

You can get the boy out of the Keynes era, but you can’t get the Keynes era out of the boy.

Kawentzmann
As a rule of thumb I delete all music that makes me reach for the volume knob to turn down. If I want to turn it up that’s a good sign.

What if it is good music?

JakeDobner

Kawentzmann
As a rule of thumb I delete all music that makes me reach for the volume knob to turn down. If I want to turn it up that’s a good sign.

What if it is good music?

Then don’t destroy it. If music is good it will make use of dynamics. If it once did so and then was over-compressed - thats it. You can’t go back.

But that is because I listen to music a lot and grew very sensitive.

The Exotic Guitar of Kahuna Kawentzmann

You can get the boy out of the Keynes era, but you can’t get the Keynes era out of the boy.

JakeDobner
What if it is good music?

I have music I like on CD that I can barely stand listening to because of the recording being so pumped up. The Mars Volta and Mew are two bands I can think of right off that have really harsh sounding records due to the abuse of compression. I don't want to crank up a recording that's already sounding distorted at low volume levels.

The thing is, it's a really sad era for music production. People are still making great music but the record labels have their heads up their @$$es when it comes to what the consumers want.

I wish I could get excited about new releases like I did when I was a kid but I just can't anymore. First off, they're too expensive ($20 for a CD is insane IMO) and offer nothing in terms of sound quality or presentation. Give me SACD, DVD-A, good recordings/music and a five page booklet for $10 and I could be interested in buying records again.

www.apollo4.com

I think it’s short term psycho acoustics versus long term psycho acoustics. When exposed to overcompressed music for 40 or 50 years you will eventually lose interest, but these results are still in the making. Funnily many amateurs think a loud track is a better one at first impression. I was like that in the CD era too, I thought the loud bits are the good, content rich ones and the quiet ones are approximations.

The Exotic Guitar of Kahuna Kawentzmann

You can get the boy out of the Keynes era, but you can’t get the Keynes era out of the boy.

The whole argument always reminds me of my brother in law. He has been making music since his teens with a group of his friends and became quite good at the stuff he does. He writes good songs and they do folk rock versions of 1960s hits and traditionals. The only thing that keeps them from coming across as being accomplished musicians is that they always play as loud as they can without their voices toppling over. Always. There are no soft parts in their whole set. My grandma always complained about that, no, she thought it was funny. It’s tragic-comical, when such an easy thing to do like leveling down a little once in a while is ignored in favor of leaning into it 24/7.

The Exotic Guitar of Kahuna Kawentzmann

You can get the boy out of the Keynes era, but you can’t get the Keynes era out of the boy.

I'm a big quality guy, but for my favorite albums/songs I am more than willing to listen to them at 96kbps or even lower just because it is great music. This is assuming I had no access to higher quality recordings of those albums. Point being, you can't create great music by having high fidelity. More enjoyable to listen to? Absolutely, but great music is great music. Granted anything ripped at less than 128kbs and with modern compression is very very rare, I'd still listen to it.

The loudness war is about the y-axis of the audio wave, not the file compression.

The Exotic Guitar of Kahuna Kawentzmann

You can get the boy out of the Keynes era, but you can’t get the Keynes era out of the boy.

I posted a recent Wall Street Journal article on this very issue in this thread.

Ivan
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Kawentzmann
The loudness war is about the y-axis of the audio wave, not the file compression.

I know, I was just saying I'd rather listen to a terrible sounding audio file than not listen to great songs.

JakeDobner

Kawentzmann
The loudness war is about the y-axis of the audio wave, not the file compression.

I know, I was just saying I'd rather listen to a terrible sounding audio file than not listen to great songs.

I understand this completely. Like phone lines with certain subjects this has an aura of “realness”.

In my mind the molecular levels of production and mastering are songwriting as well, or at least part of the whole thing whatever you call it. It‘s all pitches, levels, frequencies, rhythms.

The traditional songwriter starts with a broad view of the tune he has in mind and fills this with chords and main melodies. Sometime during recording he hands this over to the producer and he in turn hands it over to the mastering engineer.

Today there are alternative ways of creating a finished rendition of a tune, and all the steps can be under artistic considerations of song creation, or writing. The Beatles and Stones conquered the studio for bands, the mastering suite is next.

For this reason I can listen to the 1000th version of a tune if it is produced and mastered in a great way. To me it’s half new.

So an annoyingly recorded (regardless at what stage) is not necessary today and some tunes deserve better, but who’s got the time for them? I mainly listen to 50s and 60s music and grow more intolerant towards “modern” production standards the more great recordings of old I find. They don’t mix anymore.

The Exotic Guitar of Kahuna Kawentzmann

You can get the boy out of the Keynes era, but you can’t get the Keynes era out of the boy.

Very loosely related, proposed legistlation for the loudness war in televison broadcast is a bill that would require the FCC to "preclude commercials from being broadcast at louder volumes than the program material they accompany."

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