From: "Paul Davis" <paul@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Date: 04/12/16 09:59
> Imagine you just obtained a finished, commercially produced and
> mastered song.
> You play it on your music system with the volume set at 5.0. It
> sounds a bit too quiet, so you turn it up to 7.0.
> Did you change the mix? Did you change any aspect of the
> production process?
> Hopefully it is clear that you did not.
> Normalization is *EXACTLY* equivalent to this process.
I think that by now I can see the topic :)
So, if the CD is very much in the ballpark of the commercial productions of the same genre, then why not leave the final adjustment to the listener anyways ?
Date: 04/12/16 09:59
> Imagine you just obtained a finished, commercially produced and
> mastered song.
> You play it on your music system with the volume set at 5.0. It
> sounds a bit too quiet, so you turn it up to 7.0.
> Did you change the mix? Did you change any aspect of the
> production process?
> Hopefully it is clear that you did not.
> Normalization is *EXACTLY* equivalent to this process.
I think that by now I can see the topic :)
So, if the CD is very much in the ballpark of the commercial productions of the same genre, then why not leave the final adjustment to the listener anyways ?
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