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Is there a standard dB (max, I guess) that my song should be at to be consistent with all other songs recorded/released?

I.e. that when listening to songs and then mine comes up, the listener doesn't have to reach for the volume knob one way or the other.

Thanks.

Comments

Kapt.Krunch Mon, 12/08/2008 - 23:16

Make all of YOURS the same levels as each other. You'll never get them to sound just like everyone else's.

Pull up 5 or 10 different songs from 5 or 10 different artists and play them. Do they sound the same? Probably not.

If you want it to sound as bad as the latest Metallica offering...do as Codemonkey said.:wink:

And, there's a difference in "peak levels" anyway. If you settle at, say, -6...whatever, but you have some that are compressed to nearly a straight line, and some that are more dynamic....they will both peak at -6, but the compressed ones will be louder, overall, then the dynamic ones. But, the dynamic ones will probably sound better once you turn them up.

Kapt.Krunch

Cucco Sat, 12/13/2008 - 10:49

majormusic wrote: Depends on your style of genre.
Hip-Hop musicians should keep their instrumentals at -3 to -6 db BEFORE laying the vocals. If you need more help, message me. I'll help you out.

Uhhh....really?

I don't know if you understood the question. If you did, then your answer is even more scary.

He's talking about root means squared levels.

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