And, what does it do exactly?
Cheers
ok, cheers matezekrab wrote:Normalize is a way for adjusting the volume of audio files to a standard level. This is useful for things like creating mixed CD's and mp3 collections, where different recording levels on different albums can cause the volume to vary greatly from song to song.
Do it before any mastering process or converting to mp3.
Avoid normalizing mp3s as well.
Where can I get one of these mastering plug-ins?am wrote:there are a few schools of thought on this issue...zekrab wrote:
...Do it before any mastering process ....
some say, don't do any normalizing before mastering, and let the mastering plugins (or mastering engineer for that matter) do the normalising for you.
Its weird - while I'm mixing, there's no distortion - I can only hear the distortion when listening to the recorded file. Nothing to much, just some vocals break up a little and bassline sometimes sounds a little distorted. But when I'm mixing, I cannot hear any distortion.forge wrote:yes you'll need to render again
but if you're actually hearing distortion I would guess you should have a look at your comp/FX or one of your channels because a digital render will clip rather than distort (unless it's doing in your amp or speakers but guessing you'd naturally turn it down when you hear it). so if it's actual distortion chances are your pushing something a little to hard within the mix rather than the whole mix
Or lowering the gain on your individual tracks.Is it just a case of lowering the master volume while mixing?