On Monday 31 October 2005 17:01, Cesare wrote: > The definition of 'normalization' in the description of the software > linked below is, IMHO, too vague. And normalization is not enough for > your purpose. I agree, that's why I am thinking that I need _average_ meters > To my understanding, normalization means finding the maxpeak level of > the entire track and scale the signal to use the highest possible level > without having distortion (when there's the maximum peak). > > I suggest that you *just need to trust your ears*, listening to the > first track and the adjusting the volume of the second according to your > perception. A compressor/limiter would help with the peaks. > > Try this instead: > > http://jamin.sourceforge.net/ Nice info, I remastered the song with this info, thanks > or just apply a compressor before the output of your audio software of > choice. > > c. > www.cesaremarilungo.com > > Andrew Lewis wrote: > >Marcos Guglielmetti wrote: > >>As instance, suppose I want to master my song at a similar RMS level as > >>another audio file has. > >>What should I use? > > > >http://www1.cs.columbia.edu/~cvaill/normalize/ > > > >-Drew -- Marcos Guglielmetti Coordinador del desarrollo de Musix GNU+Linux (www.musix.org.ar) fecha: s?b nov 12 21:05:01 CET 2005 ___________________________________________________________ 1GB gratis, Antivirus y Antispam Correo Yahoo!, el mejor correo web del mundo http://correo.yahoo.com.ar