Jump to content

Roxio Community

Maximize Volume Of Each Track


  • Please log in to reply
11 replies to this topic

#1 airtas

airtas

    Novice

  • Members
  • PipPipPip
  • 70 posts

Posted 23 September 2008 - 08:01 PM

what exactly happens when you select this option.............obvisouly it makes the tracks louder but does it give a consistent increase?
XP Pro SP3
Dell Inspiron 700m, Intel Pentium M 1.60 GHz Processor, 1.5 GB RAM, Creator 2009.

#2 jeanrosenfeld

jeanrosenfeld

    Digital Guru

  • Digital Guru
  • PipPipPipPipPipPip
  • 10,697 posts
  • Gender:Male

Posted 24 September 2008 - 09:59 AM

If you mean in Music Disc Creator, project settings, clicking on the help there says:

Maximize volume of each track (will require more time to output): Select to normalize the volume of each track on the disc.

If you then look up normalization in the main help file (Help menu, Music disc creator help center, index tab) it says this:

Normalize tracks to a consistent level: This option sets the volume of songs in an audio project to a consistent level. The level is set by selecting the check box and moving the slider left or right. A setting of 90 percent, for example, sets the volume of all tracks in the current project to 90 percent of the loudest song. Normalization is turned off by default.

Normalize tracks is an option in Roxio home Tools menu, Options, Audio CD, where you will find the slider.

However, it is not clear to me whether that option is used by music disc creator, or whether it uses some internally fixed level of normalization. I don't ususually don't set that option, as for classical music (which is my main interest) one would not want to alter the relative loudness of different tracks (e.g. movements in a symphony).

I'm also not sure how it affects the dynamic range of each track.




Dell XPS630i. Chipset: nVIDIA nForce 650i SLI. CPU: Intel Core 2 Quad Q6600 2.4 GHz. RAM: 3 GB (DDR2-800 DDR2 SDRAM). Hard drives: 2x WD25 00AAJS-75VWA 250GB SATA. Video: NVIDIA GeForce 8800 GT 512 MB. Audio: Audigy 2 (Dell OEM). DVD RW drives: Liteon iHAS234, HL-DT-ST DVD+-RW GSA-H73N. All drivers and firmware up to date.
XP Pro SP3 , IE 8, WMP 11, all updates. Creator 2011 Pro.

#3 airtas

airtas

    Novice

  • Members
  • PipPipPip
  • 70 posts

Posted 24 September 2008 - 02:21 PM

QUOTE (jeanrosenfeld @ Sep 24 2008, 09:59 AM) <{POST_SNAPBACK}>
If you mean in Music Disc Creator, project settings, clicking on the help there says:

Maximize volume of each track (will require more time to output): Select to normalize the volume of each track on the disc.

If you then look up normalization in the main help file (Help menu, Music disc creator help center, index tab) it says this:

Normalize tracks to a consistent level: This option sets the volume of songs in an audio project to a consistent level. The level is set by selecting the check box and moving the slider left or right. A setting of 90 percent, for example, sets the volume of all tracks in the current project to 90 percent of the loudest song. Normalization is turned off by default.

Normalize tracks is an option in Roxio home Tools menu, Options, Audio CD, where you will find the slider.

However, it is not clear to me whether that option is used by music disc creator, or whether it uses some internally fixed level of normalization. I don't ususually don't set that option, as for classical music (which is my main interest) one would not want to alter the relative loudness of different tracks (e.g. movements in a symphony).

I'm also not sure how it affects the dynamic range of each track.



gotcha so lets say track

A is super loud
and
Track B is 50% of it

if I check the box to maximize track b will be as loud as A?
XP Pro SP3
Dell Inspiron 700m, Intel Pentium M 1.60 GHz Processor, 1.5 GB RAM, Creator 2009.

#4 tbrewst

tbrewst

    Digital Guru

  • Digital Guru
  • PipPipPipPipPipPip
  • 12,412 posts
  • Gender:Male
  • Location:Taos,NM

Posted 25 September 2008 - 07:41 AM

Keep in mind that Normalization works on a wavform.Therefore if you use mp3's as the source normalization doesn't work.
Take a look at this thread for a bit more info.
"Do you wanna see me crawl across the floor to you?
Do you wanna hear me beg you to take me back?
I'd gladly do it because....."




Terry

AMD Athlon II X4 640 3.0Ghz processor
ASUS M4A88T-M/USB3 Motherboard w/VIA 8 channel sound
Power Color ATI HD5550 512mb DDR3 video card
4Gb DDR3 10666 memory
1Tb Hitachi SATA hard drive
(2) Lite-On iHAS224-06 SATA DVD drives
Rosewill Destroyer case
Dell DX-20A6Q QFlix DVD burner
Cambridge Soundworks THX 5.1 speaker system
I-inc iH-252HPB 25" widescreen monitor connected via HDMI
Dell 1100 Laser printer
Roxio USB Capture Device
Windows 7 OS

#5 airtas

airtas

    Novice

  • Members
  • PipPipPip
  • 70 posts

Posted 26 September 2008 - 07:06 PM

QUOTE (airtas @ Sep 24 2008, 02:21 PM) <{POST_SNAPBACK}>
gotcha so lets say track

A is super loud
and
Track B is 50% of it

if I check the box to maximize track b will be as loud as A?


is this  true what I am saying though?
XP Pro SP3
Dell Inspiron 700m, Intel Pentium M 1.60 GHz Processor, 1.5 GB RAM, Creator 2009.

#6 jeanrosenfeld

jeanrosenfeld

    Digital Guru

  • Digital Guru
  • PipPipPipPipPipPip
  • 10,697 posts
  • Gender:Male

Posted 27 September 2008 - 06:08 AM

Yes, if you set the slider to 100%. I think if you set it to 50%, all (including A) would be at 50% of A.

Why not experiment with a few wav files?  Then you could tell us...:-)
Dell XPS630i. Chipset: nVIDIA nForce 650i SLI. CPU: Intel Core 2 Quad Q6600 2.4 GHz. RAM: 3 GB (DDR2-800 DDR2 SDRAM). Hard drives: 2x WD25 00AAJS-75VWA 250GB SATA. Video: NVIDIA GeForce 8800 GT 512 MB. Audio: Audigy 2 (Dell OEM). DVD RW drives: Liteon iHAS234, HL-DT-ST DVD+-RW GSA-H73N. All drivers and firmware up to date.
XP Pro SP3 , IE 8, WMP 11, all updates. Creator 2011 Pro.

#7 airtas

airtas

    Novice

  • Members
  • PipPipPip
  • 70 posts

Posted 27 September 2008 - 02:07 PM

QUOTE (jeanrosenfeld @ Sep 27 2008, 06:08 AM) <{POST_SNAPBACK}>
Yes, if you set the slider to 100%. I think if you set it to 50%, all (including A) would be at 50% of A.

Why not experiment with a few wav files?  Then you could tell us...:-)



I have a whole cd that the volume is very low.............since the whole cd is low maximizing wont help, correct?
XP Pro SP3
Dell Inspiron 700m, Intel Pentium M 1.60 GHz Processor, 1.5 GB RAM, Creator 2009.

#8 jeanrosenfeld

jeanrosenfeld

    Digital Guru

  • Digital Guru
  • PipPipPipPipPipPip
  • 10,697 posts
  • Gender:Male

Posted 27 September 2008 - 02:23 PM

Yes, I think so, but what you can do is open tracks in Sound Editor, then click on the fading and voilume icon, click maximize volume. That will increase the volume of the track by some, but such that its loudest part is not clipped.
Dell XPS630i. Chipset: nVIDIA nForce 650i SLI. CPU: Intel Core 2 Quad Q6600 2.4 GHz. RAM: 3 GB (DDR2-800 DDR2 SDRAM). Hard drives: 2x WD25 00AAJS-75VWA 250GB SATA. Video: NVIDIA GeForce 8800 GT 512 MB. Audio: Audigy 2 (Dell OEM). DVD RW drives: Liteon iHAS234, HL-DT-ST DVD+-RW GSA-H73N. All drivers and firmware up to date.
XP Pro SP3 , IE 8, WMP 11, all updates. Creator 2011 Pro.

#9 airtas

airtas

    Novice

  • Members
  • PipPipPip
  • 70 posts

Posted 27 September 2008 - 02:37 PM

QUOTE (jeanrosenfeld @ Sep 27 2008, 02:23 PM) <{POST_SNAPBACK}>
Yes, I think so, but what you can do is open tracks in Sound Editor, then click on the fading and voilume icon, click maximize volume. That will increase the volume of the track by some, but such that its loudest part is not clipped.


whats the difference between maxmize volume and normalize?
XP Pro SP3
Dell Inspiron 700m, Intel Pentium M 1.60 GHz Processor, 1.5 GB RAM, Creator 2009.

#10 jeanrosenfeld

jeanrosenfeld

    Digital Guru

  • Digital Guru
  • PipPipPipPipPipPip
  • 10,697 posts
  • Gender:Male

Posted 28 September 2008 - 10:04 AM

I think the nomalize is related to adjusting the relative sound level of a number of tracks. In Sound Editor the Maximize works just on the selected track (s) and maximizes each irrespective of the loudness of the others.
Dell XPS630i. Chipset: nVIDIA nForce 650i SLI. CPU: Intel Core 2 Quad Q6600 2.4 GHz. RAM: 3 GB (DDR2-800 DDR2 SDRAM). Hard drives: 2x WD25 00AAJS-75VWA 250GB SATA. Video: NVIDIA GeForce 8800 GT 512 MB. Audio: Audigy 2 (Dell OEM). DVD RW drives: Liteon iHAS234, HL-DT-ST DVD+-RW GSA-H73N. All drivers and firmware up to date.
XP Pro SP3 , IE 8, WMP 11, all updates. Creator 2011 Pro.

#11 studioj.lardinois

studioj.lardinois

    Newbie

  • Members
  • Pip
  • 1 posts

Posted 23 February 2011 - 09:21 AM

Normalization is not what you guys think it is. Normalizing a track means you take the very peak of the song, and adjust the volume of the track so that the peak is at 0dB, or whatever you set it to. Normalization is basically a transparent alternative to compression or limiting - it's like moving the fader up on the console, but done perfectly. Here's the catch - you don't need to normalize unless it's your own music and you mastered it incorrectly. A commercial recording will already be normalized.

You're hearing this from a professional audio engineer. Trust me on this.

If the song was mastered by "average joe's empty warehouse mastering facility" then yeah, it's probably not done correctly. But any legitimate recording will be normalized.

Now there are also different forms of normalization - peak and rms - absolute loudest point versus average... basically. Obviously this can cause some clipping.

Edited by studioj.lardinois, 23 February 2011 - 09:26 AM.


#12 d_deweywright

d_deweywright

    Digital Guru

  • Digital Guru
  • PipPipPipPipPipPip
  • 12,187 posts
  • Gender:Male

Posted 23 February 2011 - 10:43 AM

View Poststudioj.lardinois, on 23 February 2011 - 09:21 AM, said:

Normalization is not what you guys think it is. Normalizing a track means you take the very peak of the song, and adjust the volume of the track so that the peak is at 0dB, or whatever you set it to. Normalization is basically a transparent alternative to compression or limiting - it's like moving the fader up on the console, but done perfectly. Here's the catch - you don't need to normalize unless it's your own music and you mastered it incorrectly. A commercial recording will already be normalized.

You're hearing this from a professional audio engineer. Trust me on this.

If the song was mastered by "average joe's empty warehouse mastering facility" then yeah, it's probably not done correctly. But any legitimate recording will be normalized.

Now there are also different forms of normalization - peak and rms - absolute loudest point versus average... basically. Obviously this can cause some clipping.

You're implying (or I'm inferring) that normalization "should" be done on all tracks.  But is that necessarily so?  Shouldn't a gentle ballad be quieter than something that really rocks out?  Or are you agreeing with the trend to maximize and compress everything so that the perceived dynamic range of all songs is minimized?
Dave D-W

Beware the lollipop of mediocrity.  Lick it once and you'll suck forever.  - Brian Wilson

[
GIGABYTE GA-MA785GM-US2H MB | Athlon II X3 440 (3.0 GHz) | 2GB DDR2 RAM | 1-500GB HD (C: XP, G: Win7, D: - Apps, E: data & apps), 1-500 GB HD Data) | 2 - LiteOn DH20A4P DVD burners | External Dell QFlix DX-20A6Q DVD +/- writer  | Windows 7 | Creator 2010 | Tektronix Phaser 850 solid ink printers | Epson R220 Photo/Disc printer | Ricoh GX 5050n dye sublimation ink | Epson Workforce 1100 printer




1 user(s) are reading this topic

0 members, 1 guests, 0 anonymous users