The loudness war
There are many wars and many wars are
worth fighting. There is much evil in this world gagging to be slain. The loudness war is one war not worth
participating in. For it will bring no benefit to your record. It is
much better to teach the clueless of how to listen. There are several things that make
people perceive a song as better sounding over another.
People perceive a louder version
of the same song as better sounding
People perceive a version of the same song with
added treble as better sounding
People perceive a bass and treble
gain along with a midrange dip as better sounding
Bands and producers of records are
aware of these three facts and they exploit these facts, especially
the the first two. They compress and clip to increase loudness and they add unnatural amounts of treble when mastering their
records. There is one genre of music that is intelligent enough not
to have participated in this loudness and treble war and for very
good reason. That genre is the genre of Classical and Orchestral
music. As I explain the flaws of the loudness war Classical music is
a perfect and easy to comprehend example as to why one should not
kill their records with hyper compression and treble boost.
Loudness
Compact discs have a certain
amount of head room this headroom is the span of the quietest noise it
can produce to the loudest noise it can produce. This headroom is the
space where dynamics in music can be expressed. In Orchestral music
you might hear a quiet start by the string section slowly getting
louder and then the bras section comes in as the music turns in to a
vigorous march but it will still get louder when the orchestra hits
the climax with a loud Orchestral hit with timpanis and everything.
In Contrast to this when you
listen to modern CDs the music is always hitting the roof of the
headroom making the whole CD as loud as the Orchestral hit this makes
the CD sound very loud. This is achieved with an array of mastering
processors. The Compressor makes quieter parts of the song louder by
reducing the Loudness of the louder parts of the song and then
increasing the overall volume of the song now the loud parts are as
loud as they were before but the quieter parts are now almost as loud
as the loudest parts. The next step is to use a limiter which squashes
the Loudness peaks down even further and more aggressively than the
compressor with an infinite ratio after the make up gain increases the
volume of the whole song so the peaks hit the roof again the whole song
is now even closer to hitting the roof of the headroom. Now as a final
step Comes the Clipping Clipping means that the peaks of the waveform
in the music get literally clipped off this is achieved when the songs
volume becomes louder than the roof of the headroom allows. This causes
the peaks of the songs loudest parts which now go past the roof of
the headroom to be chopped off leafing small square wave peaks this
causes a degrading of the sound in exchange for added loudness. Such
clipping is standard nowadays. A a couple of decades ago
sound engineers who even clipped a song by a microscopic amount would
get the death penalty for doing so, OK maybe they woulden't get the
death penalty but they would get a good dressing down. The following wave samples show the same price of music after various dynamic processes
 This is a unprocessed waveform it has a natural dynamic range with a quiet beginning see far left of waveform |  This
is the same spice of music after heavy compression note how everything
is louder and even the quiet parts have become nearly as loud as
the peaks
|  After
compression the sound file was heavily limited making the whole clip
even louder and all peaks are now approaching the headroom limit. |  And
finally the music clip was clipped which literally removed the ends of
the waveform to allow the whole peace to be at maximum loudness even
the quiet intro is now as loud as the rest of the track and any
dynamics are completely gone.
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Treble
When listening to a classical
or Orchestral record one notices that the instruments sound very much
the way they would sound if you heard them life. If the frequency
spectrum of a orchestra was analysed on a RTA analyser one could
observe a slow decline in the volume of the treble frequencies as they
go higher up. And the orchestra is a good indicator of how much
treble should be in a recording if it is to sound natural. Because
listeners of music perceive an increased treble range as sounding
better many modern CDs have an unnatural amount of treble content.
Why clip compress and
treble boost if it degrades the sound
Everyone wants their music
to stand out. And this causes a dilemma called the loudness war.
People perceive louder as better everybody else's records are loud and
because you want yours to stand out as much as everyone else's you have
no choice but to also hyper compress and clip your tracks. Of course the
same goes for the treble gain, everyone else's songs are sparkling with
treble and if you don't do the same it will sound very dull by
comparison. If people are used to listen to high treble levels they
get desensitised to it and when they hear a more natural treble level
it will sound very dull in relation.
The reality
You
should know that when
your stereos volume is adjusted so that the average SPL
(Sound Pressure level) of both the compressed and uncompressed album
is the same and you now compare the two, the quieter CD now
sounds better. Al you have to do is increase the volume on your
stereo to compensate. The uncompressed CD has quiet parts and loud
parts. This dynamic range gives the music live and expression. There
are no
clipped waveforms and no intermodulation distortion. Excessive treble
should not
be added in the master studio if you like more treble turn up the
treble on your stereo.
 unequalised acoustic instruments have a decrease in high pitch volume due to the decreasing energy in the upper harmonics |  This
is what most mastering studios do in order keep overtones as loud as
the fundamental. this causes an unnatural high frequency response. This
kind of treble boost should be avoided in the mastering studio. The
listener can ad treble on he's stereo if he wishes to do so.
|  Smiley faces sound good and can be used on the listeners stereo system, but should not be used in the master Studio. |  Music
should not be clipped and over compressed nor should it be to trebley
it should sound dynamic and natural in frequency response. The listener
can turn up the volume and create unnatural EQ settings on he's stereo.
That's what stereo systems have volume controls and EQs fore.
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