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Topic ClosedIt's too freaking loud !!!

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Hawkwise View Drop Down
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Direct Link To This Post Topic: It's too freaking loud !!!
    Posted: October 29 2010 at 06:43
As someone who doesnt really buy CD's very often (being a vinyl freak ) i have come to notice the last few CD's i have bought have  been mastered so freaking loud ,  Yesterday the new KT Tunstall album droped through the letter box , so i took out the lovley re master of Coltrane's Giant Steps , Popped in the Tunstall didnt touch the Volume control  pressed play booooooooooooom holy sh*t man that;s freaking loud !!!

The album has next to know real dynamics to the sound  which is such a shame as  Miss Tunstall does write good songs and i am big fan of her previous albums (specially acoustic extravaganza ) but this to me because the way been mastered is almost UNLISTENABLE   .

I also found the same with a CD of  Zepplins Houses of the Holy , which now has been relegated to the car stereo
as i find cant listen to it on my hifi it does my ears in.

does this happen to many of the Prog re issues on CD ? also do they do the same to the new prog albums out there ? 

Why is this being done ? anyone else find this damn annoying ?Angry




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Direct Link To This Post Posted: October 29 2010 at 06:50
Never noticed this, so the CD's I have must be different.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: October 29 2010 at 06:53
CD's are mastered louder than vinyl recordings. It was the first thing I noticed about CD's when I bought my first one.

Beyond that I have no problem with CD's generally. Many of the vinyl albums I replaced on CD, I prefer the CD versions. So long as the orignal recordings have not been tampered with to the point where they sound like they have been completely re-recorded and reproduced, I'm generally happy with CD's. Some re-masters I've heard are no good. The one album I actually can not listen to on CD is The Sentinal by Pallas (Jim Garten would say that's no great loss ) The CD remaster I have of that album is utter rubbish. The drums sound like they've been recorded in a cave.

Edited by Blacksword - October 29 2010 at 06:54
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: October 29 2010 at 07:06
^ Oh yes, they are louder, but thats a good thing.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: October 29 2010 at 07:32
Originally posted by Snow Dog Snow Dog wrote:

^ Oh yes, they are louder, but thats a good thing.



Why  is that a good thing ?  i have volume control on my Amp if want to turn it up  dont need the record company to do it for me .





http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Loudness_war



http://www.cdmasteringservices.com/dynamicrange.htm









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Direct Link To This Post Posted: October 29 2010 at 08:00
Originally posted by Hawkwise Hawkwise wrote:

Originally posted by Snow Dog Snow Dog wrote:

^ Oh yes, they are louder, but thats a good thing.



Why  is that a good thing ?  i have volume control on my Amp if want to turn it up  dont need the record company to do it for me .





http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Loudness_war



http://www.cdmasteringservices.com/dynamicrange.htm










Becuase I think it's a good thing thats why.

I admit some Cds are way over the limit...you can tell by the waveform chopped of at the top and bottom. I don't want to get into a vinyl v CD argument though. My LP days are over. 


Edited by Snow Dog - October 29 2010 at 08:07
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: October 29 2010 at 08:31
Yea i agree i don't want to get into Vinyl v CD ether i don't think that's really the issue here , the real issue is why are record company's  Mastering albums at such high volume ?


I had a re mastered copy of Trick of the tail  is was terrible so harsh no warmth whats so ever  compared to the original mix i have on Vinyl, my brother had a CD of TRICK from the 80s to we compared the two the difference was   amazing with both agreed that the re master really was poor compered to the 80s Cd and the Vinyl    the dynamics where just not there just sounded so harsh on the ears.

I really cant understand the need to Master the CD.'s at such high volume .
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: October 29 2010 at 09:32
Originally posted by Hawkwise Hawkwise wrote:

Yea i agree i don't want to get into Vinyl v CD ether i don't think that's really the issue here , the real issue is why are record company's  Mastering albums at such high volume ? I had a re mastered copy of Trick of the tail  is was terrible so harsh no warmth whats so ever  compared to the original mix i have on Vinyl, my brother had a CD of TRICK from the 80s to we compared the two the difference was   amazing with both agreed that the re master really was poor compered to the 80s Cd and the Vinyl    the dynamics where just not there just sounded so harsh on the ears.I really cant understand the need to Master the CD.'s at such high volume .


I too have both CD versions of Trick, and the vinyl, and agree the 80's CD is much better. The re-master, although far from the worst I've ever heard, sounds a little 'tampered' with to me. Those who re-master albums take the view that the listener wants everything bigger and brighter than on the original, and you'll probably find many people do. They can't please everyone so they go for the approach that they feel will appeal to the majority of listeners.

It's a shame really, but at least we still have the vinyl and earlier CD editions to keep us happy.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: October 29 2010 at 10:28
This is just one of those little side effects of having someone other than the artist having ultimate control over the final product. I see no problem in having the loud parts be loud, but I love music with contrast.  As we get closer to a self-promotion/release based artist foundation in the digital age, which we have arrived at with many artists already, this activity will be limited to those artists who really want that type of sound. There are already those artists that make a point of "unclipping" their product. Nebelnest would be a good example. I remember when CD's first came out and several recordings had warning stickers against having the initial volume to loud and damaging equipment. Nebelnest's Nova Express warns that volume levels would be rather low due to the fact that they did not want the dynamics destroyed in the final production.

Like HW says, we all have volume control on our hi-fi's, but few of us have real sound shaping control.  
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: October 29 2010 at 11:46
I have more of a problem with some CDs being too quiet. I'd like to listen to Larks Tongues In Aspic on my MP3 player on the way to work sometimes but I can't hear anything for the first 3 minutes (yes I know it's supposed to be a quiet build up but the whole album is low in volume compared to some).

I hadn't noticed the new KT Tunstall CD being that loud. My copy of HOTH is also on the quiet side.


Edited by chopper - October 29 2010 at 11:47
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: October 29 2010 at 12:02
Originally posted by Hawkwise Hawkwise wrote:

Yea i agree i don't want to get into Vinyl v CD ether i don't think that's really the issue here , the real issue is why are record company's  Mastering albums at such high volume ?


I had a re mastered copy of Trick of the tail  is was terrible so harsh no warmth whats so ever  compared to the original mix i have on Vinyl, my brother had a CD of TRICK from the 80s to we compared the two the difference was   amazing with both agreed that the re master really was poor compered to the 80s Cd and the Vinyl    the dynamics where just not there just sounded so harsh on the ears.

I really cant understand the need to Master the CD.'s at such high volume .

Fair point. Record companies think that is what people want. Or at least they are telling us what we want. Thye only really bad case I have heard is Rush's Vapor Trails though. I believe that pop albums are the worst culprits though being mastered so loud as to be distorted. 
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: October 29 2010 at 12:32
Originally posted by chopper chopper wrote:

I have more of a problem with some CDs being too quiet.



Agreed.

The thing I hate most about listening is to need to stay around the speakers to turn the volume up for the quiet parts and then running back to them to turn the volume down when the music goes up. Angry That's not what I call "dynamics"!
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: October 29 2010 at 13:13
Yeah....this about sums up modern music in general.  This includes more modern releases of older albums.  Read up on the loudness wars, you'll be pretty unhappy.


This is still present on your vinyl you're purchasing (if they're recent vinyl), however they're probably slightly less compressed.  But really, it's all like that anymore regardless of what format.

Case in point, Starless and Bible Black's original vinyl pressing ACTUALLY HAS dynamics, and when Great Deceiver kicks in you're ears don't get assaulted with a brick walled bar of 4 minutes of the exact same volume level.  The remasters of the same album....painful....


Edited by himtroy - October 29 2010 at 13:16
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: October 31 2010 at 04:58
Loudness is not the ONLY part of it though.  Remastering also seems to kill blending of sounds that happened on old recordings. I used to wonder why I felt my CD recordings felt different from tapes and then I found a perfect exhibit to demonstrate the issue:

Donald Fagen's IGY off vinyl:



Same song off the CD:



The original vinyl recording sounds muted and relatively unclear (though this could also be because the uploader seems to be using some sort of console to record it again for us) but is warmer and the sounds blend.  There also seems to be a healthy bias towards those sounds that should be heard more prominently and those that should submerge in the background. Digital tends to bring all of them to the fore, or at least that's how it sounds to me.  The sound movements sound more artificial and forced in the remaster compared to the vinyl recording. The rhythm section in the original recording has a real throb which feels great to listen to, that's gone missing in the remaster.  These may not be important points for all listeners but they do indicate why some people feel new recordings or remaster sound louder but more sterile.  
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: October 31 2010 at 05:43
Originally posted by harmonium.ro harmonium.ro wrote:


Originally posted by chopper chopper wrote:


I have more of a problem with some CDs being too quiet.
Agreed.The thing I hate most about listening is to need to stay around the speakers to turn the volume up for the quiet parts and then running back to them to turn the volume down when the music goes up. Angry That's not what I call "dynamics"!


If that's how it is meant to be, ie how it was deliberately recorded by the engineer then it should be quiet. I want my music to sound as close to the studio sound as possible not tampered with so it loses all its dynamics and scale.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: October 31 2010 at 06:26
I don't think there's any sense in producing the music on a low volume level (and now I'm not referring to dynamics, in which it's normal to have highs and lows, according to the development of the music). How does that help? I just have to raise the volume from the speakers to the same volume I listen all my music at - the volume where I can hear what's going on. 
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: October 31 2010 at 06:30
Originally posted by harmonium.ro harmonium.ro wrote:

I don't think there's any sense in producing the music on a low volume level (and now I'm not referring to dynamics, in which it's normal to have highs and lows, according to the development of the music). How does that help? I just have to raise the volume from the speakers to the same volume I listen all my music at - the volume where I can hear what's going on. 


But if it was produced all the way on a low volume level, you would not have to rush to turn it down because it suddenly got too loud.  So that means the recording was intended to be quiet at some places and loud at some others.  I love the feeling of getting involuntarily pushed back when the music suddenly touches a thundering crescendo and takes me by surprise. Big smile
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: October 31 2010 at 06:41
Originally posted by rogerthat rogerthat wrote:



But if it was produced all the way on a low volume level, you would not have to rush to turn it down because it suddenly got too loud. 


No, those are indeed different things. I am not mixing these scenarios:

- the one when the music has various sound range dynamics
- the one when the music has range dynamics that are unpleasant to my listening habits
- the one when all the album is produced at a low volume level

Yes, I do have albums which are so well recorded and produced that they have amazing dynamics and variation to the sound and music, at reasonably high levels of volume. It IS possible!
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: October 31 2010 at 06:46
Originally posted by harmonium.ro harmonium.ro wrote:

Originally posted by rogerthat rogerthat wrote:



But if it was produced all the way on a low volume level, you would not have to rush to turn it down because it suddenly got too loud. 


No, those are indeed different things. I am not mixing these scenarios:

- the one when the music has various sound range dynamics
- the one when the music has range dynamics that are unpleasant to my listening habits
- the one when all the album is produced at a low volume level

Yes, I do have albums which are so well recorded and produced that they have amazing dynamics and variation to the sound and music, at reasonably high levels of volume. It IS possible!


I am just saying that range dynamics that feel unpleasant to you and CDs being too quiet are not the same thing.  The latter certainly reads like the third scenario in which case it would simply need to be cranked up.   What CDs do you have such a problem with, by the way? I don't remember having to ever turn the volume up while playing a CD. 
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: October 31 2010 at 07:16
Originally posted by rogerthat rogerthat wrote:

Originally posted by harmonium.ro harmonium.ro wrote:

Originally posted by rogerthat rogerthat wrote:



But if it was produced all the way on a low volume level, you would not have to rush to turn it down because it suddenly got too loud. 


No, those are indeed different things. I am not mixing these scenarios:

- the one when the music has various sound range dynamics
- the one when the music has range dynamics that are unpleasant to my listening habits
- the one when all the album is produced at a low volume level

Yes, I do have albums which are so well recorded and produced that they have amazing dynamics and variation to the sound and music, at reasonably high levels of volume. It IS possible!


I am just saying that range dynamics that feel unpleasant to you and CDs being too quiet are not the same thing.  The latter certainly reads like the third scenario in which case it would simply need to be cranked up.  


That exactly what I'm saying, too. Confused

An obvious case can emerge when you listen to different albums of the same band; for me such a case is that of Led Zeppelin. When yoy listen to I, II and III in a row, you notice that II is produced at a much lower volume than the others, and the difference is unpleasant to my ears. It's ok when I listen to it by itself and I crank up the volume, but the comparison does not favour it.
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