by SongORoland » Sun Jul 09, 2006 4:45 pm
> Rule 1,2,3,4 and 5 ":wink:"
> ** Do not peak or clip the volume of the recording as Digital Distortion > is not removeable. **
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Alas, that's what my original is filled with. So I'm painfully aware of this, tho ir's a practical mantra. ( ( (':shock:') ) )
Oddly enough, I'm finding that there are clean parts of the spectrum that are clean, and emphasizing these areas and diminishing the crackly parts.
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> A compressor could level things out a little and could be unnoticed if not > used too harshly.
> Normalize can raise everything up. If the maximum volume in the piece > is at 75% of the meter, a normalize will take it close to 100% and bring
> up everything else as well. What out for floor noise and hiss and hums
> and other nasties.
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The original I'm working with is seriously too quiet.
I'm being scrupulous about not exceeding 100 % in Normalize. And then I play it and grab it in another program using a peak limiter. So when I bring it back into Metro, the volume can be increased safely through another normalizing pass. (I can't make sense of the Limiter filter in Metro or I'd just fix it all in Metro.) ':o'
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> If a verse is all quiet, a possible gain or normalize over the section could > be a trick.
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This doesn't seem to be a big problem. Between Normalize and Peak Limits I'm pretty good with the volume.
It's not perfect, but unless somebody is playing it way loudly on headphones, they won't hear the very subtle remaining problems.
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> Most of this you probably already know but now you're not talking to
> yourself.
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Hey, don't assume I know much of anything. I have an ear, but I'm now into new territory. So I appreciate the comments. That little bit of advice made all the difference.
Subtle's indeed the trick. I got from your post that I must be careful to not overdo the filters (like Compressor). I redid everything (again) with a lighter touch and it's getting scary good.
Thanks. ':D'