Skip to main content

Hi.

I'm using a small set of speakers (Sound Blaster CT-38).

When I play certain youTube or Netflix vids, I get a very
large, loud, clear sound.

But when I record my own music, I start to red-line and
get distortion in the speakers at a much lower volume level.

Does anyone know why?

Thanks!

--Prahas

Comments

gdoubleyou Sun, 11/24/2013 - 20:39

Most likely the videos have had their audio properly mixed and mastered.

#1 I hope you don't have your speakers on while recording. It will indeed cause feedback and distortion.

#2 if you are redlining you need to turn the input level down.

#3 You could be playing at a sound level, that your equipment and room cannot handle.

bouldersound Mon, 11/25/2013 - 09:58

Prahas David Nafissian, post: 408546 wrote: When I play certain youTube or Netflix vids, I get a very
large, loud, clear sound.

But when I record my own music, I start to red-line and
get distortion in the speakers at a much lower volume level.

You've discovered the difference between average levels and peak levels. Average levels are mostly what sounds loud, even when peak levels make the meter go higher.

During the recording and mixing process you will be dealing with signals that have higher peak levels so you need to leave yourself more headroom. Tracking and mixing with average levels around -18dBFS is normal. You might have to raise your speaker volume above normal while mixing. You can use compressors and limiters to reduce the peak level and increase the average level in the mix process. You get your final loudness after the mix is done, in the mastering phase.

Prahas David N… Mon, 11/25/2013 - 14:50

Thanks guys! I feeling like I'm getting somewhere.

A bit more info: I am recording a solo piano piece
with a virtual instrument in MuLab. So it is all internal.

bouldersound: I feel like you are touching on the issues
most closely. I will read up on compressors and limiters.

Can you say more about how I get the "final loudness in the
mastering phase?"

Of course, with piano, a challenge is there is a wide dynamic
range... the pp sections sound too low volume if there are
ff sections (which you avoid clipping).

If you can say something specific to solo piano recording
(internally) this would be super too.

Thanks again, one and all!

--Prahas

bouldersound Tue, 11/26/2013 - 10:57

Maybe you can reduce the dynamics via MIDI, before the performance becomes audio. I think the velocity sensitivity can be adjusted on some keyboards/controllers, so a given difference in velocity can be a larger or smaller difference in volume.

I'd be cautious about compressing or limiting a solo piano piece. It would be easy to do more harm than good. If at the end of mixing (so to speak, as it's solo) your audio is peaking well below 0dBFS you can certainly boost it to peak just short of 0dBFS to make it louder without altering the dynamics. To get it louder than that will mean using compression/limiting or some other process that affects dynamics.

pcrecord Tue, 11/26/2013 - 11:42

If it's all internal, lower the output of the piano simulation. Then if the problem is still there, it might be an audio card buffer problem. If the buffer is to small the simulation don't have enough time/space to create the sound properly. Note that a too big buffer setting might result in latency, and creating a delay between the time you hit a note and the time you hear it.