Is there an application that stabilizes the volume level of downloaded mp3 files?
I was thinking of going in and manually editing them myself to be consistent amongst each other at some point, but then it got me thinking.
Is there an application that will equalize the volume on your audio files for you? If not, would anyone else have a use for one besides me? I'd love to know either way.
like this


originalucifer
in reply to Pirate2377 • • •Noodles4dinner [none/use any]
in reply to Pirate2377 • • •VSG:Audio:Normalization - VideoLAN Wiki
wiki.videolan.orgRotatingParts
in reply to Pirate2377 • • •How can I normalize audio using ffmpeg?
Super Usersolrize
in reply to Pirate2377 • • •FilthyHands
in reply to Pirate2377 • • •in vlc, right click>tools>effects and filters>compressor. adjust threshold to your liking, you don't really need to mess with the other sliders.
edit: you can also go to preferences>audio>normalize volume to: (set what you like)
Yoddel_Hickory
in reply to FilthyHands • • •FilthyHands
in reply to Yoddel_Hickory • • •SayCyberOnceMore
in reply to FilthyHands • • •UnspecificGravity
in reply to Pirate2377 • • •Replaygain 2.0 plugin for Musicbrainz Picard. Fix volume while getting your tags in order.
This doesn't re-encode the files but tags them with information that tells your player how to adjust playback.
Brickfrog
in reply to Pirate2377 • • •Look into audio normalisation.. for playback purposes scanning/applying Replay Gain on the files should help a bit. Most audio playback software has support for that.
There is also EBU R 128, a slightly different type of loudness normalisation, it uses a different algorithm vs traditional Replay Gain. For my own usage I found it works better keeping the loudness at the same level when playing through a bunch of different audio tracks. No idea about VLC but the Strawberry application does support it so it could be worth a look if you want to try other audio playback software.
EBU R 128 - Wikipedia
Contributors to Wikimedia projects (Wikimedia Foundation, Inc.)Quibblekrust
in reply to Pirate2377 • • •I use QMP3Gain. It actually changes the bits in the file so the files work with every app and player without needing to rely on tags. However, It also adds tags to the file which let you undo the changes later, if needed (it's lossless).
It has two modes. You can modify all the files in an album equally so that they play at the same relative volume. I guess the loudest song is set to your target volume and then the rest are adjusted relative to that. It's great because it doesn't ruin the flow of albums whose tracks connect seamlessly. Or you can modify tracks irrespective of other tracks, which is good for random singles you own.
The result is, songs in your entire library all sound more or less the same volume. The exception being that quiet tracks from certain albums will still be quiet.
You can drag every full album you own into the UI, and do them all at once in album mode. It works based on tags. Then do the same with all singles you own in track mode.
It defaults to 89.0 dB, but I prefer to use 95 dB because some devices just don't have enough volume. A tiny bit of clipping is imperceptible because decoders account for it. Many of your current MP3s already have clipping, and I'm sure you haven't noticed. So don't worry if you see red "Y"s in the clipping column.
It uses the ReplayGain algorithm. Once in a while there's a track that it just doesn't get right. A certain single will just come out too loud or quiet and needs a different dB value than everything else. Out of the thousands of MP3s I have maybe five files have been like this.
QMP3Gain
SourceForgehades
in reply to Pirate2377 • • •GitHub - complexlogic/rsgain: A simple, but powerful ReplayGain 2.0 tagging utility
GitHub