1place
106 votes Vote

There are tons of Sound Editor softwares out there doing the same thing . Yet, none of them has capability of editing to equalize the level of volume a dozen of individual files to the same level, before we do the actual burning of cd or dvd. That

David Yoon , 14.08.2011, 08:32
Idea status: under consideration

Comments

kjgrussell, 14.08.2011, 09:57
In responce to David Yoon. Ashampoo Music Studio has a function that may be what you are talking about. They cal it "Normalize"'

Regards
Peter, 14.08.2011, 19:35
Soundforge can do exactly what you're describing.

He needs more than just normalization, but the ability to perform the normalization function on a number of separate files. For that, you need the batch encoder!

I use it all the time for batch resample/dithers of my 24-bit filesets.
wrestlingsoup.com, 14.08.2011, 23:47
Normalize only brings up the highest dB to the desired point all other fluctuation in the sound only increase by the same amount. No. What I believe he is talking about is found within the paid program Adobe Audition OR the free standalone program called "Levelator".
Sooks, 14.08.2011, 15:08
That what?
Cryo, 14.08.2011, 23:54
If you're looking to normalize the volume level of a group of encoded MP3s, the freeware utility "MP3 Gain" does a pretty good job, and can be used in conjunction with an editor like this. It also does its work losslessly, so the quality of an MP3 file is not degraded, and you can even revert the changes at a later time if needed, since information about the changes is stored in the file's header.

MP3Gain can be found here...
http://mp3gain.sourceforge.net
Brad4God, 15.08.2011, 01:25
That's simply not true. Many programs, including some media players, or dedicated sound editors, such as GoldWave, offer batch normalization of songs. But I do look forward to trying out this particular program.

Leave a comment