The Beatles' 'Now and Then' is a marvel of audio restoration - but did it really need to be so LOUD ? I made a deal with myself, in the years after my blog posts about the loudness of Metallica's "Death Magnetic" went viral. (They ended up being reported in The Guardian and Wired magazine, and with me being interviewed by the BBC about how loud it was, and why Metallica fans were complaining.) The
Loudness online - how loud is loud enough, and how loud is too loud ? [Updated] Click the image above for higher resolution [UPDATE Nov 2016: TIDAL now also use normalization, and Soundcloud say it's "on the list"] [UPDATE July 2017: Spotify recently lowered their reference level to -14 LUFS] We know now that all the major music streaming services are using loudness normalization - higher level so
YouTube loudness normalization - The Good, The Questions and The Problem So, yesterday was the big headline: YouTube has started using playback loudness normalisation So from now on you'll hear more consistent playback volume from videos on YouTube, regardless of how "loud" they were when they were uploaded. To read more about what this means, and why it's important, click here. The news has had a
This is HUGE. It may not look like much, but if you're involved in music production, recording, mixing or mastering, this image could be the most important thing you'll see all year. What is it ?It's the loudness output of a YouTube playlist, as measured by the MeterPlugs LCast loudness meter. So what ?First - it's pretty quiet. The loudness levels are all quite low, especially by modern "loudness
リリース、障害情報などのサービスのお知らせ
最新の人気エントリーの配信
処理を実行中です
j次のブックマーク
k前のブックマーク
lあとで読む
eコメント一覧を開く
oページを開く