|
Posted by David Morgan \(MAMS\) on 07/18/06 17:19
<kopn@hotbox.ru> wrote in message news:1153212433.062095.305610@35g2000cwc.googlegroups.com...
> Good that you David Morgan (MAMS) know now what adaptive normalization
> is! You can read about it on dbpoweramp site.
I think you're correct in this case... it means that I won't be *screwing up*
any of my (or my client's) music.
I've also never heard of dbpoweramp... but please realize, you've cross-
posted your question into a group populated by people who consider
themselves audio professionals, and no one here is going to trust a
piece of software to combine several *critical* functions into a single
pass.
> I cannot find in the manual how to compress the dinamic range and
> increase volume in Adobe Audition.
Compression and peak limiting are needed to do this, but if you're
dealing with pre-precorded music, the vast majority of it is already
squashed to death and had few trainsients remaining.
I thought you were looking for something that *would NOT* tamper
with the dynamic range of the material? It appears, judging from
the responses found in this lengthy crossposted thread, that MP3
Gain is going to be the tool to allow volumes to appear relatively
equal... but it apparently does some lowering of gain rather than
increasing in order to accomplish this without further altering of
dynamic range.
By "adaptive" I assume that you mean you're looking for software
that learns from the application's continued use on selected program
content, and this would NOT be a professional modus operendi. This
also indicates that you are unwilling to simply use your ears and take
the time necessary to make level adjustments on your own. Which in
turn means that you really won't know exactly what the software is
actually doing to the music... end result... further mangling of what is
probably already mangled (in dynamic range) music.
To accomplish the goal you seek, you need either to roll the dice on
MP3 Gain, or resolve yourself to doing this is two or three passes,
using your ears and listening to the results of what happens.
> Can Adobe Audition compress the
> dinamic range, increase volume and convert in a batch?
My recommendation is to go back to the MP3 gain product, and
simply rely on it's automated ability to write volume data into the
header. I know of no other software (and only learned of MP3 Gain
in this thread) that has the ability to eliminate the human factor, of
which most professional software relies heavily.
DM
> David Morgan (MAMS) wrote:
> > > audioaesthetic@gmail.com wrote:
> > > > kopn@hotbox.ru wrote:
> > > > > Hello!
> > > > > How to run batches where I normalize and then save as mp3 all in one
> > > > > step in Adobe Audition?
> > > > install program in computer
> > > > click on buttons
> > > > read the words
> > <kopn@hotbox.ru> wrote in message news:1153080408.621327.302680@m79g2000cwm.googlegroups.com...
> > >
> > > This way does not help. The Help does not contain "adaptive" at all.
> > Personally, I've never heard the word 'adaptive' used in pro audio until now.
> > Reading the manual will have to do... then perhaps *you* try adapting. ;-)
> >
> >
> > --
> > David Morgan (MAMS)
> > http://www.m-a-m-s DOT com
> > Morgan Audio Media Service
> > Dallas, Texas (214) 662-9901
> > _______________________________________
> > http://www.artisan-recordingstudio.com
>
Navigation:
[Reply to this message]
|