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Author Topic: Pros and Cons of Adding Volume in Post  (Read 11493 times)

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Offline manamana

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Re: Pros and Cons of Adding Volume in Post
« Reply #15 on: October 21, 2006, 10:11:58 PM »
I realize that dynamic range is a good thing, but I have one or two shows where if you set the volume for an audible level on music, you'll wake the neighborhood dogs once the crows starts in. I'm looking for something that'll leave the dynamic range of the music intact, but squish down the crowd.

and my preamp (linn) doesn't have a volume knob, and keeping one hand on the "up" and "down" buttons is a little more active participation than I'm looking for (they don't respond fast enough anyway)

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Offline Lil Kim Jong-Il

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Re: Pros and Cons of Adding Volume in Post
« Reply #16 on: October 21, 2006, 10:47:11 PM »
I do a seperate scan on each channel.  Write down the values and then go into the volume option and increase the negative values by the exact positive amount to get both channels peak level to 0.00 dB  So if I have a -4 on the right channel I will add +4 to it to bring it to 0

I think it would be better to apply the same gain to each track unless you are trying to correct for an imbalance in the recording.  If you have a well balanced recording and one channel peaks higher than the other (maybe you have a clapper wide in one channel) then the resulting  image will be shifted if you apply different gain to each channel.





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Offline Brian Skalinder

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Re: Pros and Cons of Adding Volume in Post
« Reply #17 on: October 22, 2006, 03:27:52 AM »
but difference in levels is still quite unpleasant, and I've been thinking about what the best method of evening them out would be. I assume a normal compression pluggin would have an advers effect on the music as well. something like a "soft limit"  that would only effect those top 7 or 8 samples, though I imagine that may effect the music as well.  ideas? how do people engage this these days?

I've used compression on a handful of recordings I've made in situations similar to the one you mention.  Personally, I don't especially care about capturing the dynamic range of a rabid crowd.  Two ways to do it:  complete file at once, or individual applause/crowd sections.  For complete file at once, you won't impact the music if you set your threshold / compression ratio appropriately.  That typically means you'll have a fairly high threshold with an aggressive ratio.  I've had better success isolating each crowd outburst - I'm able to set a lower threshold with a softer ratio and still not impact the music because the music will typically drop down below whatever threshold I use before the uproarious crowd chimes in, and vice versa before the next song.  The latter takes a bit more effort, but I find the effort worth it on the rare occasions I need to do so.
« Last Edit: October 22, 2006, 03:29:33 AM by Brian Skalinder »
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Offline BC

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Re: Pros and Cons of Adding Volume in Post
« Reply #18 on: October 22, 2006, 03:45:52 PM »
agree with Bri, who cares if the clapping is clipped, set your levels based on the music.

I also edit my shows where the clapping is loud by applying soft limit compression (sound forge: effects>dynamics) to the individual sections of crowd noise (I typically squash audience peaks to ~3-5 dB or so below where the music peaks. You can play around with this to taste), then boosting the whole file using waves L2. Works pretty good for jazz and acoustic shows. Then your ears are not blown out by the crowd on playback when you had the volume cranked to hear some quiet tune.   :) 
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Offline poorlyconditioned

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Re: Pros and Cons of Adding Volume in Post
« Reply #19 on: October 22, 2006, 04:53:04 PM »
I usually normalize, and often normalize on a track-to-track basis (with max gain limits set for very quiet parts).

I do this all non-destructively (Wavelab "montage" file) and keep the original (16 bit) wave file.

I give out a lot of CDs and I've had listeners tell me it is too quiet...

I have not tried compression, but this sounds like a great idea to remove loud crowd noise, particularly when you are right in the crowd (ie., stealth recordings).

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Offline Brian Skalinder

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Re: Pros and Cons of Adding Volume in Post
« Reply #20 on: October 22, 2006, 04:56:36 PM »
agree with Bri, who cares if the clapping is clipped, set your levels based on the music.

I should clarify.  While I don't care about reducing dynamics by compressing an uproarious audience between songs, I do care about clipping the audience.  Two reasons:

<1>  While clapping itself is often transient enough that it doesn't clip in nasty and crunchy fashion, audience hoots and hollers definitely have the potential to clip in nasty and crunchy fashion.   Once the audience hoots and hollers clip, there's no going back - and IME there's typically no good way to recover.  Sure, some clip restoration tools help, but in cases like these I find they don't remove the nasty crunchiness and only minimize the audible effects.  Even during audience sections, I find crunchy clipping unpleasant.

<2>  IME, even fast transients that clip may pose problems during editing.  For example, compressing a clipped audience section sometimes produces a distorted result.  I haven't found this happens every time, but often enough that I try not to clip the audience at all.

Of course, I ran into those two issues after running my share of 16-bit recordings with levels set for the music, damn the audience clipping.  I eventually found the results too inconsistent, given the above, so I started setting levels for the audience and adjusted in post.  While I didn't capture the music at as high resolution as I might have, had I set levels for the music (and clipped the audience), I at least didn't run the risk of having nasty artifacts scattered throughout my recordings (if only during the audience sections).

Recording music in situations where the audience produces higher SPLs than the music certainly poses its challenges at 16-bit.  Fortunately, it's not really an issue at 24-bit.
« Last Edit: October 22, 2006, 05:03:48 PM by Brian Skalinder »
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Re: Pros and Cons of Adding Volume in Post
« Reply #21 on: October 23, 2006, 01:36:34 PM »
Yeah, just set your threshold just a tiny bit above (or maybe below) the music peaks, and then use a high ratio on your compressor, and apply make-up gain to get the limited peaks back up to near 0 db. This should keep the compressor from touching most of the music but it will kick in bigtime (like a limiter) when the audience levels go above that mark. The audience will still be loud as balls, but at least it won't be quite as bad as before and at least you've left the music's dynamics mostly untouched and normalized at the same time (with the make-up gain).
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Offline jkbyram

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Re: Pros and Cons of Adding Volume in Post
« Reply #22 on: October 24, 2006, 07:01:55 PM »
Off the top of my head, I'd say the big disadvantage of boosting volume post is that you boost the entire spectrum (though, I'm sure you could tweak this with some programs).  By boosting the entire spectrum, you are increasing your floor noise:

You rig has a floor noise of -60dB, and you record with a max. of -16dB.  Later you boost the -16dB to 0.00dB, that also brings your floor noise up to -44dB...  Not a big deal on the loud sections, but on the quiet sections, you may hear a little more hiss than usual...

Of course, the main adavantage is that its louder...  But louder doesn't mean better sound...

Terry









i agree but most of my recordings have crowd chatter and such which should hide most of it, if my logic is right.

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Re: Pros and Cons of Adding Volume in Post
« Reply #23 on: October 24, 2006, 07:18:50 PM »
That would be noise floor, Terry.  ;D ;D and you are dead on with Louder is not always better




Off the top of my head, I'd say the big disadvantage of boosting volume post is that you boost the entire spectrum (though, I'm sure you could tweak this with some programs).  By boosting the entire spectrum, you are increasing your floor noise:

You rig has a floor noise of -60dB, and you record with a max. of -16dB.  Later you boost the -16dB to 0.00dB, that also brings your floor noise up to -44dB...  Not a big deal on the loud sections, but on the quiet sections, you may hear a little more hiss than usual...

Of course, the main adavantage is that its louder...  But louder doesn't mean better sound...

Terry









i agree but most of my recordings have crowd chatter and such which should hide most of it, if my logic is right.

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Re: Pros and Cons of Adding Volume in Post
« Reply #24 on: October 25, 2006, 08:43:42 AM »
you are doing a good thing by running conservatively...keep up the good work.

FYI..check outthis post for some insight on level setting..



I missed that post first time round. +t, very interesting.

Offline Bart.VL71

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Re: Pros and Cons of Adding Volume in Post
« Reply #25 on: November 02, 2006, 04:45:33 PM »
I usually hard limlit the crowd noise to below -3dB relative to the music. Never had distortion due to doing that. If the audience is clipped slightly I just apply a "clip restoration" plugin before the limiting. And I always set levels for the music.

Offline jkbyram

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Re: Pros and Cons of Adding Volume in Post
« Reply #26 on: November 04, 2006, 09:47:13 AM »
waves L2 is my friend. i tend to run a bit low then raise it withL@ later if needed

Offline Brian Skalinder

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Re: Pros and Cons of Adding Volume in Post
« Reply #27 on: November 04, 2006, 12:42:18 PM »
waves L2 is my friend. i tend to run a bit low then raise it withL@ later if needed

Only with Waves L2, you're doing more than raising levels - you're also compressing dynamics.  A big deal to some people, others not.  As long as you're happy, that's what counts!  And yeah, L2 sounds pretty darn good.  Like the included IDR dither, too - my 2nd favorite to MBIT+.
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RebelRebel

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Re: Pros and Cons of Adding Volume in Post
« Reply #28 on: November 04, 2006, 04:47:23 PM »
waves L2 is my friend. i tend to run a bit low then raise it withL@ later if needed

Only with Waves L2, you're doing more than raising levels - you're also compressing dynamics.  A big deal to some people, others not.  As long as you're happy, that's what counts!  And yeah, L2 sounds pretty darn good.  Like the included IDR dither, too - my 2nd favorite to MBIT+.


Yeah, waves L2 is slaughtering a lot of commercial recordings these days..the waveforms look like a 2 x 4.


Offline jkbyram

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Re: Pros and Cons of Adding Volume in Post
« Reply #29 on: November 05, 2006, 12:10:58 PM »
waves L2 is my friend. i tend to run a bit low then raise it withL@ later if needed

Only with Waves L2, you're doing more than raising levels - you're also compressing dynamics.  A big deal to some people, others not.  As long as you're happy, that's what counts!  And yeah, L2 sounds pretty darn good.  Like the included IDR dither, too - my 2nd favorite to MBIT+.


i did not realize it was compressing dynamics.  when i have used it the adjustments are so small i have not heard major changes. i may opt for a different way to boost from now on. i don't want to compress any dynamics in my recordings. this place rocks, thanks for the good info guys.

 

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