Measureing LUFs for a couple of seconds is not integrated, integrated is measuring the whole song.
@PaulBondMusic Жыл бұрын
Absolutely!
@whatmusiciwant Жыл бұрын
Right, but if the song is already at -10LUFS, it most likely isn't going down any further. So, there isn't really any point sitting through the whole thing. The only time I do that, is if I am mixing my song and want to make 100% sure where it is. For this, he's just making a point.
@elmoreastro292911 ай бұрын
@@whatmusiciwant you're assuming the song has no dynamic development. If you measure short-term LUFS in a loud bit then the real integrated LUFS may be considerably lower - and vice-versa.
@ShonnMorris8 ай бұрын
@@elmoreastro2929 Exactly. Inegrated LUFS can only be acquired by measuring the whole song.
@KavasPVP7 ай бұрын
Yeah, but if you have for example a track that has build up and breakdowns of 1 minute long and it's pretty quiet (-14lufs) and the chorus goes up to -5 lufs and it's only 20 seconds long, then by measuring the full song you won't get an accurate representation of how loud each section is.
@taloowa5800 Жыл бұрын
The other flaw is that you don’t subtract the peak level from your LUFS average. If your meter says -11 and it peaks at -3, your LUFS is -11. Chris Muth, former chief engineer at Sterling Sound. I lived the loudness wars from the vinyl era through CD and streaming.
@Harpsea10 ай бұрын
What peaks were being subtracted to begin. That part confused my. The RMS peaks or DB peaks or what was that?
@remy333Ай бұрын
Hey Chris. I live up a few blocks north of the current Sterling location in NJ. Gehringer just recently did a tree sr master for me. Good stuff. Did you retire?
@taloowa5800Ай бұрын
@@remy333 Please give CG my best wishes when you speak to him next. I let my contract at Sterling expire in 2004 but occasionally help them out. I work at home! all the best, cm
@taloowa5800Ай бұрын
@@remy333 Sterling still occasionally calls me to help out with legacy gear. After leaving Sterling in 2004, I went full-time self-employed.
@flibflob2785 Жыл бұрын
The Advice I've heard, and that somehow makes sense to me is "As loud as possible without sacrificing quality"
@CharlesLouisRosario5 ай бұрын
That’s right.
@ZonedOutWaves4 ай бұрын
Okay but how does this work for KZbin who literally lowers your track by like -3.4-7.5 db... how the hell are these producers beating the normalization YT has set to videos?!. . I've tried ALL of this and NOTHING works. The closest I've gotten is 0.1db BUT ITS STILL INCREDIBLY LOWER THAN THE ACTUAL MASTER.... the actual master is as LOUD AS IT CAN GET WITHOUT CRUSHING QUALITY. This shit is so hard and demotivating fr. Cuz it's just a huge slap in the face when you listen back in KZbin and it completely makes you look worst than a bedroom producer. I'm at my wits end with this crap, spent hours upon hours trying to figure this out and NOBODY can give a CLEAR answer. It's all vague and I get it nobody wants to release the sauce but for FS help the people who actually have talent and potential. @@CharlesLouisRosario
@altmanidan Жыл бұрын
as a pro mixer I can validate what this guy is saying. I've been mastering for years with -10dBFS RMS (very close to -10 LUFS) and I never bothered changing anything when the whole loudness normalisation algorithm appeared. its not just a number, more than this usually sounds a bit over compressed a bit harsh and below this is not compressed enough. we need compression for everything to sit well together, its not just a loudness thing and -10 usually gives me the right amount of compression without adding any distortion. loud and clear
@jagojames Жыл бұрын
The information in this video is completely wrong. This is not how you measure loudness and will give you a false result. The -14LuFS figure is NOT a peak measurement. It is the average value (integrated loudness) across your whole song. In this way some parts can be louder than -14Lufs short term loudness (which is what he is measuring) as long as you have quieter parts to balance it out.
@Unders Жыл бұрын
👌correct. However his method does give a good ballpark, Quickly. Granted its not the "correct" way to do it. An i agree with you here that for the purpose of the video that would have been a better choice. As more people are familiar with measuring integrated that way.
@malcolmmcgeorge1343 Жыл бұрын
@@Unders Sorry, I have to disagree with you. It very much does not give a ballpark figure because he is only measuring the loudest bits. This is why he thinks mastering to -14db LUFS is wrong when it isn't. Measuring the loudest bits gives him much too high a figure which is why he thinks other people are not working to -14 when they probably are if he onlly measured them correctly!
@valdir7426 Жыл бұрын
yes it's a bit misleading. still most people take the short term LUFS and use the loudest part of the song as a reference for the whole song. that's what a plugin like ozone will do if you use the master assistant, it will only listen to a part of the song. so this is sort of a global misundestanding here.
@VisionsMusicGroup Жыл бұрын
Thank you. I was scratching my head watching this "fake news" as well. But I'm just a B-level bedroom artist, so what do I know compared to this professional.
@emptyspace123 Жыл бұрын
But Izotope's article comes to the same conclusion. Are you suggesting that Izotope doesn't know how to measure integrated loudness?
@djnaydee Жыл бұрын
Yup. I've been mastering at -8 for many years, because from all my testing, its the loudest I can get songs without introducing distortion or artifacts and still keep that punch that hits you in the chest.
@ghfjfghjasdfasdf Жыл бұрын
What do you use on your master bus?
@IanJCole Жыл бұрын
you should be using Integrated LUFS across the track not a 2-3sec loud part so your information is flawed
@Fritz2824 Жыл бұрын
no, just before his own measurement, he went on the website where we can see again -10 / -6
@RobHarrison Жыл бұрын
BTW this comment is right. You don’t measure LUFS over part of the song, the quiet bits are included in the calculation. That’s how streaming services do it and it’s in the standard.
@Fritz2824 Жыл бұрын
@@RobHarrison it's disgusting on youtube, there's -14Lufs normalization, and it still have gap between music uploaders, some tracks are quiet, and other loud..... my track is -14,8Lufs and is quieter when i compared it with some artists, famous or not
@RobHarrison Жыл бұрын
@@Fritz2824 would you like me to take a look at your source audio wavs to see if I can identify cause of issue?
@RobHarrison Жыл бұрын
Obvs KZbin won't turn your volume up so that 0.8 is not going to come back but 0.8 isn't that different and should not be so noticeable to cause you concern.
@danielbadideashaver4894 Жыл бұрын
Yeah, I went down the -14 Lufs road once, everything was quieter than what was out there, across the board. It's the usual gatekeeping from the music industry and it's people giving you BS info to keep themselves ahead. If you're making any pop oriented music, -7 Lufs. I don't care who says it too loud, I don't care who says it's clipping, these crabs are trying to keep me in a bucket and I refuse.
@cheery-hex Жыл бұрын
speaking of clipping, any reference track I pull in is +12-15db in the red in rms and -6 or so on the lufs meter. the rms makes sense but this guy is right on lufs
@zizzleberries7 ай бұрын
-0.30 db always and forever baby
@KyleTB3036 ай бұрын
-0.3 dB for the limiter threshold for room for ISP and -10 integrated LUFS at least, loud parts -5 LUFS short term. Loud music sounds more intentional and more impactful.
@Mitsch765 ай бұрын
In fact you do keep fighting the loudness war. Making bad masters. "I don't care who says it's clipping." ;-)
@zizzleberries5 ай бұрын
@@Mitsch76 if everything's clipping, nothing is.
@philColour Жыл бұрын
This is largely on point. As others have mentioned you do need to play all the source audio to get the Integrated rating. Point stands though, the -14LUFS is to normalise levels across a range of material for a good listening experience - it's not a target to aim for when mastering. Also worth noting different genres call for different LUFS rating. Most pop, rock and dance music suits a level of -8 or above imo (even when 'turned down' to -14), but if you push a nu-jazz or lofi hip-hop song to that level you will likely ruin it. I think the biggest problem here is that Spotify has (or had) a guide saying that files above -14LUFS will be turned down, and that this can cause distortions or audio degradation. In my experience, having mastered 100's of songs at -8 or higher that have gone on to streaming services, none of them have suffered any noticeable loss in quality, and I think what the crux of this video is about... is that if I had mastered these songs to -14 in the first place they would not sound as clear, powerful, punchy etc.. in fact, the client would be saying, bro, why is this so quiet compared to all the other tracks I have in my collection i.e. downloaded from Bandcamp, Beatport etc..
@marcinfilip7405 Жыл бұрын
If your mix is louder than targed level of streaming service, they will only be lowered in volume, nothing more. There will be nothing to cause distortion, or degeneraton. That alone will not affect quality of original, so there you are good to go. Transcoding may, but should not. The client, on the other hand is the one who ultimately pay your bills, so you do as they say, but mastering -8 vs -14 LUFS alone only makes one louder if you play them side by side. On the other hand if you lower -8 to -14 and play them side by side ( thats what streaming services do ) you have a lot more potential in your -14LUFS mix, because you have a lot more dB of headroom. It is up to you, if you use this potential or not, but it is there to be used. Client on the other hand knows best, and if client wants louder, louder it has to be.
@LuLeBe Жыл бұрын
@@marcinfilip7405but if both songs peak at 0, but is -8 LUFS and one is -14, and let's just assume it's the exact same mix, the -8 master is more compressed, so even when turned down in volume to be at -14, it'll sound more like a "wall of sound", while the one mastered at -14 will have more dynamics. And depending on the song, one night be perceived as louder than the other. Could be the dynamic one with punchy drums, but also the crushed one with massive synth scapes.
@benalupasir10 ай бұрын
Lol, its a fact bro...
@jimrogers7425 Жыл бұрын
One major contributing factor to the current loudness war was moving from tape based recording to digital. With magnetic tape, there was a “universal” reference level of 0 VU (volume units) equaling a known voltage level… in this case .7 ish volts into a specified impedance. With digital, since there was only a maximum level ceiling of 0 dBFS, reference levels now became whatever someone chose as their in-house standard, which is born out in all of the streaming services movie and programming soundtracks being all over the map. Originally, ‘zero’ reference levels were established because of the physical limitations of the medium used to carry the material (tape and vinyl can only be pushed so far before they compromise fidelity). With digital, fidelity as a goal has been compromised for data compaction and loudness. I miss ‘excellent fidelity’.
@VictorRiley10 ай бұрын
KZbin doesn't gain up when you're under -14 LUFS, it only brings levels down once they pass the threshold of -1 dBTP and -14 LUFS
@niplob8 ай бұрын
I noticed that too. I upload a song and it is way quieter than my mix, then I test download the youtube video again and suddenly it's -7LUFS again
@timothybondaudio Жыл бұрын
So, if you take the LUFS of the loudest section of the song, doesn't this artificially increase your LUFS value? If you measure the whole track then your peak section of -8 LUFS drops down to -10/-11 or lower depending on the track. Surely what is important is dynamic range? If you master to -14 LUFS and your peak is -5dB then that's no different to -10dB with a -1dB peak. Also, just from a musical point of view, the streaming platforms' arbitrary choice of -14dB LUFS and -1dB peak (more or less) gives us 13dB of dynamic range to use with no penalty, so maybe this is an opportunity to re-educate ourselves and the public to having music with some actual dynamics? The -8dB 'standard' was for CD production and maybe we've moved on from that? We used to high-pass everything at 40Hz to stop the needle from popping out of the record. Mastering to -6dB just squashes the life out of everything and makes it sound crappy regardless of how well done.
@valdir7426 Жыл бұрын
that's what I'm getting from this; the streaming service will analyze the whole song; and use the integrated LUFS for the whole song to determine the "penalty". Which means the loudest part will be higher. Still it means we can have a bit of dynamic inside tracks and have loudest part at -9db or so and quieter at -18db or so.
@aholder4471 Жыл бұрын
They are using the integrated LUFs which is basically taking the average of the LUFS over the whole track from beginning to end. Momentary LUFS is the instant loudness number that will fluctuate quite a bit. But I agree with what you are saying about dynamic range. Everyone is talking about LUFS-I and Loudness, but I think the more important number is Loudness Range, which if you look on the pro examples he had here on this video were all between 5 to 10 LU and up, and that seems like a pretty impressive numbers to me because that is the one number I struggle a little with getting that high. I know my mixes are not squashed, I mean none of them sound like Death Magnetic or anything, But I think there is still room for improvement and that last little 5% is the hardest to get and usually the thing that separates great from good.
@davidallanmusic Жыл бұрын
Your thinking is off. The izotope article showed the dynamic ranges of those songs.
@popsarocker Жыл бұрын
Exactly right Mastering to -14 LUFS / -5dBTP is no different than -10dB / -1dBTP; the crest factor is exactly the same; the LRA is exactly the same. This is literally what subtracting peak from LUFS in the video is unknowingly (or cynically) acknowledging: crest factor doesn't change if you simply turn it up
@chrisb3389 Жыл бұрын
@@aholder4471 laughing at your Death Magnetic reference. That album really is a prime example of ridiculously bad squashed mastering. A shame, as it was musically decent.
@moontan91 Жыл бұрын
i think -14 LUFS is still too loud for certain types of music. -8 LUFS?? that's crazy, it is songs that have no dynamic range and/or are squashed badly. Loudness can only be felt if there are quiet sections to compare it to. Pink Floyd and Led Zeppelin made amazing music that had way more dynamic range. today's music has totally gone to shit. it's music that is compressed to death so it can be listened to in a noisy environment. people don't really listen to music anymore.
@heddshot878 ай бұрын
-8 is not THAT loud lol, any good mix will easily get -8.
@moontan918 ай бұрын
@@heddshot87 -8 means you have no dynamics.
@vincentvandeperre16705 ай бұрын
@@moontan91 psychodynamics is a thing dummy
@Strepite4 ай бұрын
@@heddshot87 -8 is LOUD. period
@gregmartin63954 ай бұрын
LUFS can be deceiving. It depends on the musical content and how things are mixed and compressed. Compare some of those songs he mentioned with LUFS ranging from -5.6 to -9.9 and they all sound good and passable. In the end, compare, but use your ears!
@wickydot Жыл бұрын
in the article they never stated if the loseless files they bought were the same files that are uploaded to streaming services
@valdir7426 Жыл бұрын
they definitely aren't; look at the difference in peak in the two tests.
@MatthiasLindemann-hp2zr Жыл бұрын
3:05 Most of the time, the commercials on the TV were louder than the movie, and when you fell asleep on the sofa, you jumped up from the sofa because the commercials were so loud. The TV stations used this to their advantage so that you could see the commercials
@RobHarrison Жыл бұрын
-14 predates the LUFS system as the LUFS calculation (over the whole song not the loudest bits) was developed to support it. Bob Katz the (yes v professional) mastering engineer was I believe pivotal to it’s development and -14 was in use via his K system K-14 long before the meter or the streaming services existed. It’s based on an 83DB calibrated room. Read up on the Bob Katz K system. I’m not saying you should master to -14 if aim is to chart a single just know that there is a lot of logic around the -14 number and it is targeting home listening and enjoyment over time.
@astral_brain Жыл бұрын
I have noticed that when I measure the LUFS on an unmastered song (no master bus compression or limiting) and normalize the volume to around -1 true peak it naturally ends up very close to -14 dB LUFS.
@BrianHuether Жыл бұрын
The best way to learn modern mastering is use service like Tidal, route the audio through your DAW, place loudness meter on the track Tidal is streaming to. In Tidal turn off loudness normalization. Now you can see loudness parameters of any track you want to reference. Integrated LUFS isn't as useful as checking individual song parts. So listen to some song and then write out LUFS for intro, verse, chorus, build, etc. No approach other than above will get you to hone in on how modern tracks are being mastered. Also run a spectrum analyzer on the track. That way you gain insight into loudness and tonal balance.
@michaelnorth3785 Жыл бұрын
It's good to hear someone actually say it out loud .... thank you !
@CollinShook Жыл бұрын
Your video is much quieter than the last 5 videos I watched here on KZbin, broski!
@milesowens32737 ай бұрын
askers?
@ArcRunner Жыл бұрын
Thank-you for pointing this out. I was first introduced to the concept of a Crest Factor by Bob Katz book Mastering Audio (1st edition circa '03 - there are newer versions) and he advocated for a K-14 standard. I've found that as I and music I love has aged, the stuff that holds closer to K-14 and K-12 holds more of my interest over time than more compressed works. Yes, that's no way to win the chart in the current market place, but I'd put the thought out there for artists to have a mix of your work available that can be mastered to -14, -12, -10, -8, etc. dB So that when you and your fans are older, you have another way to re-vitalize your work.
@djnaydee Жыл бұрын
Yup, when songs are super squashed they fatigue the listener much quicker. Same as youtube videos that are edited with ultra fast cuts. Within a minute or so I cant even follow whats happening anymore and just switch to something else.
@wheel4732 Жыл бұрын
Agreed. All these songs he went through are top of the charts modern pop. You think they care about dynamics lmao? I prefer breathing room in my music, so a -12 is where I'll be headed unless I'm mastering for a specific type of music
@Mikey__R Жыл бұрын
This is a great option! You can press your CDs using your -8dB LUFS master, and upload your -14dB LUFS to the streaming services. Radios play from CD so you'll get the radio mix for free. You can provide B side mixes at -14 so your CD customers can still get a decent quality listening experience. Just call the A side the radio edit, or whatever.
@XPerienceYouthMusic3 ай бұрын
Thanks for this information
@gearslasher7383 Жыл бұрын
It depends. If you turn on Sound Check in Apple's Music App, the program material is about -15 to -13 dB LUFS. If you turn that off, you see, what's described in the video.
@jesseeatsbrains Жыл бұрын
Looking at the dB change in music from the 80s to the 90s is crazy. No wonder they had their own sound back then
@PrincipalAudio Жыл бұрын
-14dB LUFS-Int is really silly to aim for. It destroys the aesthetic people want from a "master". When dynamics are reduced using limiting, soft saturation and clipping, it changes the overall sound, giving it more of a "dreamy" feel. For electronic genres, most people prefer this sound. Producing, mixing and mastering the same genres/styles in -14dB LUFS-Int totally changes the way it sounds. Yes, it'll sound "more dynamic", but that's NOT the way people want it to sound. Here's my aim:- Blues: -9dB LUFS-Int Rock: -8dB LUFS-Int Dance: -7dB LUFS-Int Acoustic (lacking bass): -11dB LUFS-Int Acoustic (with low end): -10dB LUFS-Int Country: -10dB LUFS-Int However, this changes depending on the tracks and production. These are just 'rough' aims.
@Strepite4 ай бұрын
IF they want that, they can easily achieve it in the mix while having even more control over clipping, distortion etc...
@ruprechtsrubberglove Жыл бұрын
Streaming services turn your -8 lufs track down to -14, and usually sounds worse than a master aimed for -14. I know from experience having a loud track that sounded great go onto the services to be flattened by the streaming normalisation
@iamjordanpass Жыл бұрын
DSPs only turn down your track IF the listener is using NORMALISATION
@Trinison7 Жыл бұрын
I have consistently been uploading my Master's at around - 8 to -10 and my masters do not get turned down the way they say. The key is to have a good meter that also reads your dynamics. If your Dynamics are in the green most of the time than in the red and you send in a master of that around -8 it would sound good. Also what this guy is saying is true because I would rip audio to use as references when I master and they are around the same volume levels. Here's my chart. For instrumentals master between -12 to -10. Songs with vocals -10 to -8. However monitoring your dynamics is still key. When using reference tracks match to lufs and RMS of those tracks to your masters. That will start getting you in the ballpark by matching the dynamic range.
@snubdawg1386 Жыл бұрын
what do you mean with "If your Dynamics are in the green most of the time than in the red ...." why should they ever be in red?
@Trinison7 Жыл бұрын
@@snubdawg1386 MAAT makes a very good that will help when doing mixes and because it allows you to monitor your dynamic range. I will include a link so you can see how it works and you will understand what I mean UCoLCmff5dDTYVTdg4fJV4Bw
@astral_brain Жыл бұрын
Why do you think your masters don't get turned down? Do your songs on, say Spotify, sound roughly equally loud as everything else? If they do, which I'm sure they do, they have been turned down to -14 LUFS as everything else.
@Trinison7 Жыл бұрын
@@astral_brain if your masters have good dynamics then when it gets normalize but the streaming services it will still sound loud. It is important to have a meter that monitors your dynamics. So when you are adding a limiter of clipper or both you can keep an eye on how the dynamics are being affected as you increase volume and depth. MAAT meter is perfect for this
@Trinison7 Жыл бұрын
@@astral_brain kzbin.info/www/bejne/p4PZm6trlLijpJosi=dGxZDL6OCDCblIl7 a link about that MAAT meter plug in
@shpater Жыл бұрын
1. Acording with your own measurment, all Apple measured songs peaked to -2.5 or -3 dB. This means that Aplle attenuated these somgs level by apx. 3 db. This means that for apple services, if these songs LUFS was adjusted 3 dB lower the song would have been sound same loudnes with extra 3 dB headroom. So acording with your own the best Lufs level is around -11 to -13 dB. 2. To my understanding, the streaming services measure the laudness level of the whole song, not just a 3 second loudest level. This means that the avarage level of these songs is even lower and -14dB starts to feel more the correct number. 3. To my knowledge Apple do not bring up level of quiter tracks, just limit the maximum. 4. The Lufs measure level according with listening curve. This means that tracks with more bass and less medium can be with higher RMS level, and this explains the non flat curve you have shown of the grammy songs.
@studioMYTH Жыл бұрын
Again, it's not 3 seconds he is fast forwarding through the video of the measurement, it's very obvious the songs don't sound like that and he is fast forwarding through the measurement so he doesn't get struck...
@AutPen38 Жыл бұрын
I would trust the Izotope article more than the meters of a guy running Apple music into his DAW via a soundcard and his own faders. If you buy the CDs or digital files of the chart-topping pop songs, they really do have LUFS values in single figures. The streaming services then turn them down to -14 LUFS so that they don't stand out as much alongside random songs on a random playlist. But the top pop songs really are compressed and limited to extreme levels, such that the actual masters (and CDs and WAVs) sound much louder and have much less dynamic range than music of the past. The point is that professional pop music is really loud. Spotify will turn it down, but the main reason our amateur tracks don't sound professional is that we don't compress, clip, and limit it as much as the pros do. A master at -14 LUFS just isn't compressed enough for the pop charts.
@astral_brain Жыл бұрын
What most people totally miss regarding loudness normalization is the reason WHY they do it. It has nothing to do with streaming services being advocates of dynamics or wanting to end the loudness war. There's one simple reason: they want their users to have a good listening experience so that they keep paying their monthly subscription fee. A good experience is not achieved if the levels between songs are all over the place. There is no such thing as a loudness "penalty". They simply match the volume of your track to everything else, and this is beneficial for all parties involved. This means you can master your song to any LUFS you want and it will still sit nicely with every other song.
@davidallanmusic Жыл бұрын
Nailed it. I don't understand why people make this more complicated than it needs to be.
@joe4570 Жыл бұрын
I dont think music under -14 lufs will be turned up though. In fact I know it because classical music on streaming platforms is still very quiet (because it t3nds to be mastered under -14 lufs)
@astral_brain Жыл бұрын
@@joe4570 It will be turned up to -14 LUFS, or as much as the headroom allows. Here is an excerpt from Spotify's mastering guide: "If a track loudness level is -20 dB LUFS, and its True Peak maximum is -5 dB FS, we only lift the track up to -16 dB LUFS" Adding to the example above, if the original true peaks had been at -7 dB or lower, the track could have been turned up to -14 LUFS.
@joe4570 Жыл бұрын
@astralbrain8265 presumably everyone is mastering to at least -1 db true peak though. So yes you're correct but if we assume everyone is mastering to at least-1 true peak then -20 stays -20
@astral_brain Жыл бұрын
@@joe4570 Correct.
@jeffbridges6110 Жыл бұрын
I usually go for -9.0 i-LUFS and it ends up around -7.5 or -8.0 . And I don't do this by squashing everything through a limiter. But I do use a limiter in the end chain to catch any random peaks from jumping out. Good video.
@thomashambrecht6435 Жыл бұрын
We have some customers who currently don't want to listen to music at all because everything has been compressed into standard pulp.
@gzis6685 Жыл бұрын
Fake information that will lead your songs to worse quality when uploading on platforms with normalization applied. Yes, mastering to CD or club levels is important when you go for live performance. But these days everyone is sharing their products via yt or spotify and those are really normalized to -14. So when you upload on one of these platforms song that was mastered to higher values, it for sure has impact on dynamics, volume and overral quality. Try for yourself and youll see. Learnig by yourself is better than listening to someones opinion, who obviously isnt saying all of the information.
@DieserEineee Жыл бұрын
Why should we subtract the peak from the LU-I ?
@Endless_Skyway_Adventures Жыл бұрын
Because the assumption is that the original song was mastered at 0 and it assumes that the streaming service turned it down by whatever the peak is. In reality it was probably mastered at -1 db to account for inter sample peaks so lufs - peak+1 is probably the right number.
@pigknickers2975 Жыл бұрын
The relationship between dB and LU is not linear, close but it is not exactly the same thing.
@fabrikc_official11 ай бұрын
correct me if I'm wrong but you're comparing the STREAMING LUFS Limits to a maybe digital or physical release where there are NO limits. You can't do "one master to fit them all", this you should always consider. And you really pick 2 seconds to get the integrated LUFS? Some kind of confusing.
@EberFilipeSunlight91Ай бұрын
A guy here in Brazil had the information that the big big label producers always knew this, I just want to understand why!
@RudeRecording Жыл бұрын
For CD mastering it was always shoot -9 dB average level with a max of -1 dB to avoid clipping DAC. Note that it hasn't changed from RMS. It sounds like most of the references you cited were within a dB or so from that standard. From what I've seen is that the streaming services will adjust the level down to -14 dB LUFS but won't adjust up to that level.
@GoogleAccount-kw1mz Жыл бұрын
i usually create different files for each purpose. for example: artist - song title - 24 bit - 14 Lufs artist - song title - 24 bit - 9 Lufs artist - song title - 16 bit - 9 Lufs artist - song title - MP3 - 9 Lufs i've always assumed that uploading the 24 bit, -14 Lufs, -1 Peak would always sound 'full' in streaming services. but i've noticed that the compression that happens, when building up into -9 Lufs is where that "mastering magic" really shines. the thing is, every time i've tried uploading the -9 lufs - it doesn't sound as full as other songs that are mastered then brought down by the streaming services. Maybe it can be that one decibel, and I should try -8 Lufs and uploading that.. but it doesnt sound as alive as when i do upload the -14 Lufs. if that makes sense. it's nice to have the option to give away the louder version in bandcamp - or physical copies and digital .zips. and i've noticed that most songs are uploaded between -8 Lufs or -10 Lufs (using the stats for nerds option in youtube). the louder version just sounds flat compared to -14 Lufs. (In my trials of error lol).
@RobHarrison Жыл бұрын
This is actually what many releases seem to do now and historically too. Back in the day you'd never see the same master being used for album and single releases or for use in cinema or video backing. MP3 you really need 24bit to get the best quality but for CD you have to dither to 16. If I'm listening to the album I don't want ear fatigue at all or I'll turn it off but if I'm listening to a single then I can stand a bit more fatigue cos only a few minutes long.
@SelfPropelledDestiny Жыл бұрын
Set up a re-record from Spotify feed and compare the loudness of your uploaded -14 song against other similar songs. You will probably find it very soft in comparison. The bit of compression that limiting adds makes a mix sound fuller and louder, then there is headroom, EQ, True Peak, etc. Point is I’ve uploaded the exact same track to Spotify thrice, every time getting louder, and it literally does play through Spotify louder as well per documented re-recording. And that’s re-recording with normalization on btw.
@balsampillow Жыл бұрын
Are you saying Apple Music, Spotify, etc. DO NOT bring the LUFS down to -14? And if they do, how does that affect the sonic fidelity with LUFS at -6 or -8? How are these top tier mastering engineers prevailing when they send in -8 or -6 LUFS files? Also, are you doing peaks only in your examples or the entire tune (integrated LUFS) Would not that be erroneous or incomplete to not verify the entire file?
@AndrewMaze Жыл бұрын
You can turn Spotify normalisation off in your Spotify settings (just Google it). Or set it to loud mode and everything will be normalised to -11 Lufs. So he's got the point. iTunes on the other hand does not allow users to turn off the normalisation (as far I know). The only thing is matter for iTunes is -1 dB true peak.
@ParanormalArson Жыл бұрын
That's not even remotely what he's saying. At all. He never said anything about streaming services' normalization practices. He's analyzing hit songs and seeing what levels they're mastering at. It may be "incomplete" to only analyze a sample, but it's extremely unlikely that a song with a LUFS of -7dB at its loudest will be anywhere near -14 integrated. It may be a bit lower, but no lower than -9 or so. The point isn't that streaming services aren't going to normalize a track above -14LUFS, it's that mastering to -14 for the sake of matching the streaming service isn't necessary and possibly detrimental depending on the track.
@valdir7426 Жыл бұрын
@@ParanormalArson "but it's extremely unlikely that a song with a LUFS of -7dB at its loudest will be anywhere near -14 integrated. It may be a bit lower, but no lower than -9 or so." that's extremely dependent on the song; but it would be cool to have a proof of that.
@ParanormalArson Жыл бұрын
@@valdir7426 I mean, it's really not, with the exception of MAYBE Classical and Jazz. In pretty much any form of "popular music" (i.e. Rock, Metal, Pop, Hip-Hop, EDM, etc), if you have a greater variation in dynamics than that you likely need to change something in your limiting or compression.
@valdir7426 Жыл бұрын
@@ParanormalArson this Billie Eillish song has 10 Db of dynamic over the song; I'd be curious to know what the average is over the whole song. Anyway it's clear that the streaming service does lower the level but from -8 Db LUFS or more for the whole track to 2,5 lower than that makes it -10,5dB LUFS; so how do you account for the remaining 4 DB? that's what I'd like to understand. so integrated LUFS is part of the explanation; but if it's not enough; what is it?
@RiverSongMusic6 ай бұрын
Super interesting. My background is in radio - a few things I wanted to mention - radio stations (in US) typically request production to -6db, or at least they did during the decades in your chart which were the years I was in radio. Then the stations would have a compressor to even things out. Also worth a mention is radio stations (and TV too) intentionally play the commercial material louder - they do it on purpose, as obnoxious as that is. This is not always true, but usually. Now I'm producing to Spotify and learning all about LUFS for the first time in my live, even though I spent 25 years producing for radio! I think we've reached the limit, where sound quality will just suffer if people keep pushing it. I do have a question still - wondering about if Spotify "normalizes" things, in other words, if you're citing the LUFS for some top hits, do they play at that level on Spotify without Spotify "changing" the volumes? I ask because sometimes I hear Spotify changes the volume after you upload your song if it needs volume adjustment, and here you're suggesting when I listen to Spotify I'll hear a big hit and it will be playing on Spotify louder, without any "adjustment." Also I thought of one more question! If I am producing a soft, dynamic song, soft folk or even classical with a lot of quiet parts, should I allow for a quite low LUFS-I reading, -20 or something low like that? Thanks! Thanks for the video!
@alexvelazquez3679 Жыл бұрын
good shit bud loud in clear.
@whatmusiciwant Жыл бұрын
Dude. I just got into shoegaze and I am currently working on my first shoegaze/alt-rock album. So, thank you for this because I was mixing to -14 and frankly, it's shoegaze I wanted it LOUDER. I mean, "wall of sound". So, thank you for this. It seems, normalization doesn't matter, what matters it what you think fits your genre/album.
@nallibeats Жыл бұрын
bro I can easily reach -8 LUFS integrated when mastering and it sounds loud when I export it but when I upload a song on KZbin it just becomes low as fuck compared to others on KZbin
@stratocaster539 Жыл бұрын
Folks, I use no16 limiter which you can find free online. It allows you to compress, limit and clip your music and add more volume to bring your mixes to the desired lufs.
@KH1DRO Жыл бұрын
i use pro L-2
@kobuk Жыл бұрын
This is what Spotify is recommending today. I suspect major labels are now producing one loud master for CD and one quieter master for all streaming services but ultimately I don't care what they are doing because they released garbage for years during the loudness wars era. "Target the loudness level of your master at -14dB integrated LUFS and keep it below -1dB TP (True Peak) max. This is best for lossy formats (Ogg/Vorbis and AAC) and makes sure no extra distortion’s introduced in the transcoding process. If your master’s louder than -14dB integrated LUFS, make sure it stays below -2dB TP (True Peak) to avoid extra distortion. This is because louder tracks are more susceptible to extra distortion in the transcoding process."
@tobysandovaloficial Жыл бұрын
---- Garbage for years during the loudness wars era / 💯 ❤ !!!
@MikeBrayton Жыл бұрын
Legitimate question: Why are the pros mastering higher than -14? For something other than streaming services, right? What exactly? I get that some music sounds better with less dynamic range, and if that's the case then we should certainly do what sounds better, but it looks like the pros master every single song that way? -10 or above. Why?
@SAZIZMUSIC7 ай бұрын
Thank you sir. But now the big question is what will happen if we upload a song with -8dB LUFS in youtube ? Will youtube brickwall limit it to -14db LUFS and make it sound super crashed ? Or will it decrease the loudness of the whole track preserving the dynamics ? That is what i wanted to know.
@timothystockman7533 Жыл бұрын
I've been mastering the music sets for my Internet radio station at with a target of -16 LUFS. I almost never run out of headroom. I do some basic gain riding to keep listeners from reaching for the volume control a lot. I'm guided by the indications of a TC Electronic Clarity M stereo level indicator and soon will be trying a Dorrough 280D.
@timothystockman7533 Жыл бұрын
And by the way, who wants to emulate the crap the music industry is putting out? Their stuff would sound a lot better if they didn't squeeze the life out of it. But, these days, for the most part, people don't care about crappy sound quality. If everyone else sounds like crap, what's the incentive to be different?
@brianholtzmusicsound Жыл бұрын
Thanks for your diligence on this. Were the songs you analyzed subject to the streaming -14Lufs standard or were they direct from whatever distribution you can them them from? Would ones mastering level be a moot point if the streamers simply raise or lower volume to suit? Also, do you think the gain reduction (Spotify) has an effect on sound quality of an ex: -6lufs track? Thanks again!
@gzis6685 Жыл бұрын
Of course. Just try to post it there. Then listen it in your pc and compare to the uploaded one. Youll see for yourself.
@valdir7426 Жыл бұрын
they were obviously taken from Apple streaming service; as they had a peak at -2.5 or so. The service did apply a "penalty" but I'd say the -14 dB standard takes the whole song into account; not the loudest part; so the penalty would be a lot lower than the difference between the loudest part LUFS. or maybe there's something else going on as well I'm not sure.
@VaughnGeorge Жыл бұрын
Great video brother !! VG
@Harrysound23 күн бұрын
Can you get more than -14lufs out of Spotify
@j.o.n.i.h7 ай бұрын
When someone listen to your -14db lufs song without volume equalization it's going to be a lot quieter than pro records. The loudness is in the mix. When you get better at balancing your mix you notice that it's easy to get etc -7db lufa loudness. This has been the biggest struggle for me personally for so long.
@BassBusMusic Жыл бұрын
The full story is that they "bought" each track/album. CD/lossless media has always been mastered to louder levels than streaming. There is nothing new in that. Most people do not buy their music. They stream it. It states quite clearly in the article that streaming is set to -14 LUFS. Simple answer is master to -14 for streaming but if you intend to sell then go for higher.
@DavidCamposComposer Жыл бұрын
All these tracks I tested were from Apple music streaming charts. I didn't test CD.
@abrotherinchrist Жыл бұрын
@@DavidCamposComposer Don't streaming services normalize tracks? I was under the impression they analyzed the whole song and took an integrated approach to how they would normalize. I think what BassBusMusic is saying is that you would have gotten a different result had you bought the CD like Izotope did.
@mattbielasiak9599 Жыл бұрын
There also are settings, at least in Spotify that allow a listener to bypass their normalization. Which could be the case in his tests, I don’t have Apple Music so I can’t test it myself
@garethde-witt6433 Жыл бұрын
In the early days of recording and mastering music was mixed so the needle wouldn’t jump out of the groove on a vinyl record, it’s when things went digital is when things got l stupidly louder
@TayajohMusic Жыл бұрын
In short, for streaming/uploading to social media: aim for -14 lufs to -10 lufs. For anything else, you can go up to a -8 lufs or whatever feels right.
@realfingertrouble Жыл бұрын
I master my podcast to -16db but that's cos it's a bit draining to listen at -8 or -10db for a long time. But it's a similar thing, 'pros' say master podcasts at at really quiet -23db LUFS, but that means you can't hear it on the Tube or with ear buds. Even for music podcasting, -16db is a little too quiet, but I found -14db a little too grating, but if I was more of a pop podcaster, I'd definitely bump it up. It's getting that sweet spot to not kill any dynamic range but also cut through the environment. I might go back to -14db LUFs at some point.
@thewizardtk Жыл бұрын
GUYS!! LUFs is essentially a measure of dynamics. Master to whatever LUFs gives you the effect you’re after since Spotify balances them all out anyways
@scaz21816 ай бұрын
So can i set the limiter to make my song play at -10db long term without spotify lowering the volume of it?
@volpofficial2k9 ай бұрын
it just doesnt make sense, i upload a -8 lufs track to youtube and its not loud, it makes the audio quiet, please someone help
@volpofficial2k9 ай бұрын
@@DerSilvano wdym?
@lacikollar64Ай бұрын
KZbin lower your sound to -14 haha
@BostonKid-2566 ай бұрын
Actually as a producer, I say each genre has its own perfect LUFS level and that's why you are adviced to use reference tracks when mastering so that you can match the LUFs range of the genre
@clementj200510 ай бұрын
I'm new to mix and mastering, as a movie composer. I'm surprised by this video and take good note of it ! I'm also surprised by some comments which confuse me. You clearly show the LUFS from an analyses website and complete with a quick mesure in Logic so I don't understand why they argue that some additional maths is needed ! You know what, I will trust nobody and do the same as you did but with a measuring of an entire piece of movie music. Thanks !
@DavidCamposComposer8 ай бұрын
Glad it was helpful!
@rmv9194 Жыл бұрын
You are measuring the loudest parts. Some songs I am mastering for my band reach -8 lufs in the loudest parts but have an integrated -11 LUFS level (is not that far from the -14 standard).
@homelessballoon Жыл бұрын
What about Dolby Atmos? Apple will not allow a mix with -8 LUFS.
@frubo_ssg8 ай бұрын
FYI: There are delievery standards e.g. the R128 broadcast standard ‘Loudness normalisation and permitted maximum level of audio signals’ by EBU is defined at -23 LUFS (+/- 0,5 LU) published November 2023.
@RobertRyda8 ай бұрын
nice one here. i agree and my magic number is and has been -9-ish, what i would say is - if you cut the subs off, you would probably measure the master at -14LUFS instead of -8LUFS
@randallnoises Жыл бұрын
GREAT video man! thanks a lot!! cheers from Brazil
@lavinchi6709 Жыл бұрын
Very interesting and helpful video!!!Grazie Mille!!
@LordBiffClips Жыл бұрын
so will spotify mess with a -8lufs upload in any way?
@Garry646 Жыл бұрын
it will turn down the volume at playback depending on the user settings
@dogsam80662 ай бұрын
You are right, some people complain that you measure the peak loudness in real time, but the mainstream DAW can measure the overall average loudness of the audio, and the results are still very close, most of them are above -11LUFS, and none of the most popular styles of music I have tested are around -14. The only confusion is whether the audio I downloaded is compressed by the platform?
@Beizeiten78 Жыл бұрын
The new Queens of the Stone Age record, ran through my interface and meters, has the meters in the red nearly the entire time. LUFS around -6.0. Still sounds good, but I think that’s a bit ridiculous for a “professional” mastering.
@vidworxsfx Жыл бұрын
@Beizeiten78 I agree, there was a Bruno Mars song, same deal in the red distorted way out of balance with the bottom end and it sounds like crap I could not believe they released this and someone said yup its good to go, As stated well many of the pros do it this way. Believe me many pros do not think it sounds good, they are just doing what the producer and label asked of them. I remember Bob Ludwig a mastering legend, said he would make 2 versions one how he felt it should be done and one that was asked of him so the client could then make the choice from there. I absolutely hate the loudness war mentality, loud is not better, sure if its done right it can sound passable but the true dynamics if the song had them will just no longer be there in the way it was intended. Take some classic music like Steely Dans Aja as an example ... the music is allowed to breath and have its dynamics kept intact, if this was mastered to -8 or some other insane LUFS it would sound like crap at least to those who know what it should sound like and are listening on a real system. So while yes its dependent on the music I do not like this whole every thing must be ridiculously loud if this one jumps off the bridge we must all jump of the bridge. Call me old fashioned but that's what your volume control is for you can make it as loud as you like. As for SAGE Audio that was ref in this video I have to say one thing and I have no affiliation with them at all, but have listened to his work and to my ear his mastering sounds fantastic open and punchy not some over compressed heavily limited mess, way more natural then most of the big release crap in my opin.
@darrellroseborough7275 Жыл бұрын
I totally agree with Beizeiten78; loud definitely doesn’t mean better. Has the loudness competition gotten so bad that we just put stuff out there without considering dynamics? What I here is a bunch of over compressed loud bass saturated music. Loud does not particularly make your music stand out. In my opinion and my opinion only a great song and arrangement makes the song. I’m not saying make the song where you need a hearing aid to listen to but at least in the competitive ballpark. I have no problem with -10 or 12 even. Tracks can still be loud enough but maintaining clarity and dynamics.
@aisonikamusic7 ай бұрын
Thankyou!!! Gold advice. Remastering at around 8ish now.
@budi_nabota_riwuga Жыл бұрын
Here what I focus on is, more to a specific genre of music, we should not look at Lufs in general based on level, but based on music genre, I experiment, for rock music and orchestra that focuses more on the details of musical instruments so that we can listen clearly we cannot make it past -12lufs, if ballad music is a smaller instrument we can raise it to -9/-8 lufs, If jazz vocal and acoustic we can raise it to the limit of -6lusfs
@theiammike123 Жыл бұрын
My take. The loudness war is over in a sense. Thanks to the LUFs normalization standard, not every single record from every single genre is obligated to be mastered loud anymore like in the 2000s. It's all now fully up to the producer/artist's vision and taste. In other words, we can have a Billie Eilish record and a Silk Sonic record at the same time w/out having to worry that one is better because it's louder than the other. Me, I would master at somewhere in between -14LUFs to -8LUFs integrated. And it's up to me and my client to decide what we're going for.😊 The only issue is, not every streaming is fully implementing the standard. Case in point : KZbin Music 😅
@MaxRayMusic Жыл бұрын
Nice take. What do you think our true peak levels should be for our masters. I was surprised to see some pro songs with +1db true peak when we are told to be -2db true peak from Spotify. I wonder if the mastering engineers are bouncing out separate versions of the masters, one louder for cd quality and one quieter for streaming services like Spotify and tidal.
@rmv9194 Жыл бұрын
I guess they just let it clip@@MaxRayMusic
@abrotherinchrist Жыл бұрын
I heard another KZbin channel saying that the top engineers don't really pay much attention to True Peak. IDK if that's true but I'd like to find out.@@rmv9194
@wumpoleflack Жыл бұрын
I did the same exercise a few month ago and decided my target would be -8 db integrated LUFS. Not -14! You just validated what i discovered on my own. Thank you!
@noisynerdman11 ай бұрын
I have been coming close to this conclusion in my own feeble attempt at mastering. This has confirmed this.
@vinylmastersgr10364 ай бұрын
In Greece older songs on compact disc were -16 to -14LUFS and they have so crystal clear sound, they don't distort. For nowadays -12 to - 10 LUFS it's ok but not -8 or -7LUFS. Taylor Swift and Billie Eilish are around -8 and -6LUFS. Besides, they have increased the bass and subbass and they have cut the highs from many songs nowadays.
@georgeabraham7256 Жыл бұрын
So you are listening to the heaviest dubstep at a comfortable level and an add comes up and you nearly lose your hearing.. what is the problem?
@ProAudioIQ Жыл бұрын
Cool vid! Are you sure the streaming services bring level up to -14dBFS? Initially they only brought levels down. Have you found something that says that has changed and they raise it up?
@franciscoesmanhoto8445 Жыл бұрын
I´ve just checked that with a song I mastered for youtube and they didn´t raise it up. A shame cause I was couting on that. I took it for granted... It was my fault anyway. Second step then I compared my master to an oficial Post Malone video music and they definitely lowered it down quite a few dBs to lock to -14 LUFS integrated. So that´s it. The information this guy has given is not false, but the streaming services in fact lower down the songs that have beyond ceiling LUFS. It´s all your choice to work a master louder than you really need.
@_BangDroid_ Жыл бұрын
@@franciscoesmanhoto8445 KZbin only applies loudness normalization on some devices, desktop/web player usually but not always, mobile usually but not always, smart TV's usually not.
@jeanmartin-g8x11 ай бұрын
yes but wont the streaming services turn it down??
@RadicalSurgeMusic6 ай бұрын
Ya know? This does makes sense. Some of my songs I've mastered ended up having -14 LUFS be too quiet compared to reference tracks or listening to music in car stereos. The -7 and -8 area does a nice trim on the peak transients when maximizing.
@josephyagappan1896 Жыл бұрын
Very useful. Thank you.
@flinxsnicopert Жыл бұрын
Thank ❤
@Overxpossed Жыл бұрын
My latest track has -9 LUFS and -1 peak. Noticed that KZbin lowered the track to around -6.9 db (a 45%), and Instagram just did not touched the levels.
@MickDarkstar12 ай бұрын
Clipping. Less limiter & Master Compressor, clipping and sidechain compression is key ;) Will sound loud without killing transienst and removing dynamics
@enkourmental Жыл бұрын
Wondering how they get to -8 lufs when Spotify requires a master that's louder than -14 lufs to be under -2db true peak... the loudest I seem to be able to reach is -10 to -12db lufs. 😢
@MaxRayMusic Жыл бұрын
Hey there. So if you see in the article in the video all the pros have true peaks louder than -2db, in fact some even go as high as +1db true peak. I wonder if the mastering engineers are bouncing out separate versions of the masters, one louder for cd quality and one quieter for streaming services like Spotify and tidal, I'll research this more. Anyways, as for getting loud masters you are going to want to run your track through a clipper and then a limiter to get the loudness!
@enkourmental Жыл бұрын
@@MaxRayMusic yeah I think they bounce out separate masters. That would make sense because different platforms have different standards.
@enkourmental Жыл бұрын
@@MaxRayMusic what settings should I use on Fruity Soft Clipper for loudness?
@MaxRayMusic Жыл бұрын
@enkourmental hey I'm not sure as I work in ableton. I would recommend you get a proper clipper because sometimes you will need the hard clipping settings and a soft clipper won't cut it. I recommend standard clip, if you sign up for their newsletter it's only 18 bucks for their clipper. Then watch a tutorial on KZbin on how to use it and you should be golden. Then run it into a limiter at the end of your master chain and you'll get loudness you never thought possible!
@VAIBHAVSINGHMUSIC8 ай бұрын
how to monitor directly from streaming service to DAW plugin??
@SolarPeel Жыл бұрын
At University we are being taught to mix to -6dB (dbfs as per master fader meter in daw) , and then master to -12 LUFS 🤷♂️
@CyanideLovesong11 ай бұрын
-12 LUFS-I is a good balance between loudness and dynamic range. Mastering engineer Ian Shepherd recommends -10 LUFS-S (short term, loudness over 3 seconds) peak during the loudest part of the song as a starting point. That will usually end up around -12 LUFS-I for the whole song... MOST commercial music is much louder than that, but it actually wrecks the dynamic range to do that, and more and more people are waking up to that. So your university's advice is good for fidelity, but if you do this professionally you'll deal with annoying bands/managers/producers that want you to master louder.
@SolarPeel10 ай бұрын
@@CyanideLovesong I asked one of the lectures about this, and in short he said exactly that, although, he did mention when he sends stuff off to likes of abbey road they come back generally -9LUFS . He said recently he was struggling to get a piano piece above -10 without destroying dynamics , he sent it to a guy at abbey road and it came back -8LUFS and sounded amazing (as would be expected).
@CyanideLovesong10 ай бұрын
@@SolarPeel Yeah, in the end it's subjective. Also what numbers are we talking here? When you say -9, -8 ... Is that LUFS-Integrated? Or LUFS-Short Term at the loudest parts? There's a big difference. Here's an example of a song that wouldn't have the big dynamic bass that it does if it was more smashed: kzbin.info/www/bejne/foG3c5SGj99lba8
@SolarPeel10 ай бұрын
@@CyanideLovesong LUFS integrated. I think he said you can have short term hitting -4/-5lufs , but I might be getting that wrong! Sure that’s what he said tho. And cool I will check that video out - thanks ☺️ edit: wonder if It’s worth taking the song and putting it through a compressor to hear the reduced dynamics.. might as well hah
@CyanideLovesong10 ай бұрын
@@SolarPeel Wow, that is in hardcore loudness war territory and I personally prefer music to be more dynamic. I think Ian Shepherd's advice is best, but he masters more dynamic than most engineers.
@DWHarper62 Жыл бұрын
Spotify allows any song to go to any LUFS volume you want but the default listening settings in the Spotify app is to "normalize" the audio to the -14dB level... KZbin does NOT allow any volume level and sets every recording to the -14dB LUFS... So it depends on the service that is streaming... The best is to get a nice healthy volume and let the streaming services do what they do... That being said, to see any dynamics and punch taken from a recording for the sake of loudness is a shame...
@quelocoel Жыл бұрын
The irony of the guy saying the "Blind leading the blind" completely got me hahahaha. Anyways, thanks for making this kind of videos so the people that actually study we can keep being better than random amateur youtube self-thaught "engineers"
@touch1827 ай бұрын
This is the most controversial upload in KZbins history.
@Randuski Жыл бұрын
Ok I’m izotope: what version of the songs were they measuring? Did they buy and download the song? Because that is a different version than what’s on streaming. Even on izotope software, “some of the best mastering software”, there is a CD, or Streaming option. Streaming is -14, CD is like -8 if I remember correctly. What izotope was measuring on that list was the “CD” version, which is what you get when you download the song. Also, when you tested on Apple Music, my question is, if you measure those songs and they’re above -14, that means that the streaming service isn’t normalizing the songs. Which they do. Soooooooo what’s up with these measurements you’re getting? It’s because you’re not measuring the integrated lufs. You’re measuring a snippet of the song. ie, not integrated
@bakedcreations8985 Жыл бұрын
As long as you succeed at shortening the distance between your peaks and valleys without sacrificing the feel of dynamic range you might sound louder at -14 than other songs that reads -14 lufs and above I would guess. Its a matter of denseness. In other words it is not the length but the girth that matters
@BENWORKIN89 Жыл бұрын
lmao at the last sentence.....
@rimmersbryggeri Жыл бұрын
In 1975 they were mastering for vinyl and loud as possible is less for vinyl than for digital.
@taviqmasteringonline2754 Жыл бұрын
If you master to -9.5 LUFS or higher, you are killing the song and basically dynamicly re-eqing (reshaping frequencies) the track to be unrecognizable based on the original dynamics of the track and the original EQ signature. This is the true irony of making things loud. - At -10 (and in some cases -11) LUFS the music is already LOUD enough without destroying the original dynamics of the song. - A song at -8 & a song at -10 LUFS can sound as equaly as loud if they are limited to the same final peak level limit (-0.2 for example). However, the main difference that will be heard is the +2dB shift in the mid range and high-end and the -2dB shift in the lowend. - When you push a limiter that hard (doesn't matter if you are using 1 or 5 in series) you are literally dynamicly tilt eqing the song. The sound is still equally as loud, It's just our brain and ears are more sensitive to mid range frequencies and up. - Try this then level match the two by ear and see for yourself. You probably won't like the lowend. However, this is one of the very reasons why clipping because so popular. - Even with all the above said, the most important thing is not just getting to a desired level. What's more important is......how you get there.
@Maioro77 Жыл бұрын
Does KZbin normalise to any particular LUFS? I put a music video up 6 months ago and deliberately mastered the audio "quieter" to leave it with some dynamics, it is definitely quieter than just about anything else on KZbin.
@saardean4481 Жыл бұрын
In case new people wonder , No. same Lufs does not mean that any song with the same lufs will sound „as loud“ as another one. It is not that easy unfortunately. So don’t get crazy over it if your track is showing -8Lufs but sound much“quieter „ than the „Famous Hits“. Lufs does not take in account the Eq and overall energy balance of a song. That’s why I said what I said. There is more to sounding loud than Lufs readings
@Brown_magick Жыл бұрын
Thanks brother 🔥🔥🔥
@DavidCamposComposer Жыл бұрын
Any time
@eafloe Жыл бұрын
After much testing I typically shoot for around -8 integrated. Sounds great in the car to me and I use some of my favorite albums as reference. I refuse to let streaming services dictate what sounds good. If they turn it down, it's their platform so that's on them. But when it's time for manufacturing to CD or vinyl, I know my release is going to sound exactly how I want it to.
@XanarchistBlogspot Жыл бұрын
So stupid, digital has an 80 db + noise floor, if you want it louder turn the volume, louder with the greater dynamics of less compression actually has a greater impact as the difference between the quiet and loud sounds are greater.
@cagrisimsek79953 ай бұрын
Hi, great video, what loudness level do you use on your youtube voiceovers?
@garudasomanna Жыл бұрын
I don't quite understand mastering at a -8 db level: do we have to push up the limiter's output gain? Would not the song sound squashed?
@bllymusic961410 ай бұрын
Use clippers and saturation
@garudasomanna10 ай бұрын
Okay; @@bllymusic9614
@reedy8585 Жыл бұрын
you produce at -6db so that there is headroom for the mastering (final balancing)
@galefraney2 ай бұрын
I didn't hear you mention what streaming service you are referring to ... for audio in music videos uploaded to KZbin, documentation says that if the audio is louder, it will be re-encoded to -14dB LUFS which can cause the audio to sound worse ... you didn't specify whether you are specifically speaking about music to be uploaded to Spotify, or other specific streaming services ...