AumStudioBrian wrote: Is there a trick for getting all 12 tracks on an album at the same percieved volume?
Tracks I'm currently working with were done over 1 year's time, so the volumes vary quite a bit, even after using my 'evil L2'.
Right ... the L2 only raises the level of what's there, and it's artifacts will effect the various material diffferently ... assuming different midrange, and vocal to bass/kick relationships.
This is really a case for professional mastering.
You probably need compression, eq and limiting ... maybe even a different signal chain for each 'era' to hold it all together to a standard that works for you.
On top of what was suggested, I'd say you can also use RMS metering as opposed to peak metering. RMS is closer to perceived loudness. However, your ears will have to be the ultimate judge.
Comments
EQ can sometimes matter as much as compression/limiting. Bright
EQ can sometimes matter as much as compression/limiting. Bright tracks can sometimes seem "louder" than corresponding darker mixes.
AumStudioBrian wrote: Is there a trick for getting all 12 tracks
Right ... the L2 only raises the level of what's there, and it's artifacts will effect the various material diffferently ... assuming different midrange, and vocal to bass/kick relationships.
This is really a case for professional mastering.
You probably need compression, eq and limiting ... maybe even a different signal chain for each 'era' to hold it all together to a standard that works for you.
On top of what was suggested, I'd say you can also use RMS meter
On top of what was suggested, I'd say you can also use RMS metering as opposed to peak metering. RMS is closer to perceived loudness. However, your ears will have to be the ultimate judge.
-Erik