I've finished my track, and when I bounce it out to an aiff file, the sound is much quieter than my other tracks. Anyone know what I can do to remedy this?
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Apr-21-2009 01:44
Lolo
I play Trance no Dance
Registered: Dec 2002
Location: Brussels, Belgium
use the search engine on this forum, and look for maximizer, limiter.
Adaptive Limiter on the output 1-2 channel will solve the problem. If you had read the manual, you should now that.
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Http://www.airwave-music.com is my new site. Djairwave.com is no more. A new era has begun
Apr-21-2009 04:13
Chronosis
Supreme tranceaddict
Registered: Dec 2003
Location: Málaga
Reading something about mastering shouldn't hurt either.
The point isn't to "get out of your body", it's to bring awareness to your consciousness while you're experiencing another reality.
Apr-21-2009 06:36
Zak McKracken
Trance
Registered: Jun 2003
Location:
why do u render to aiff?
Apr-21-2009 17:02
Lolo
I play Trance no Dance
Registered: Dec 2002
Location: Brussels, Belgium
quote:
Originally posted by palm
why do u render to aiff?
why not? aiff and wav, it's the same after all.
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Http://www.airwave-music.com is my new site. Djairwave.com is no more. A new era has begun
Apr-24-2009 04:07
Alekos
Supreme tranceaddict
Registered: Jul 2003
Location: George is on
quote:
Both are fully uncompressed audio in "perfect pitch". The only difference is that .wav is the code easily recognizable to Windoze, probably because windoze has trouble reading .aiff files. The Mac can access both types of files and register them for perfect pitch.
>Is there any difference between the two in sound quality or file size?
Both are fully uncompressed audio. A four minute song can rack up about 40+MB of space, which is standard for perfect pitch. Perfect pitch encodes music at 1411Kbps, which means there are a lot more wavelengths in the audio frequency format, and each takes up space.
There is no difference in sound quality, just the code, but you can encode the file types back and forth to find out if there is a difference in sound quality. However, even with incredible hearing and modern earphone technology it should be impossible to distinguish the quality between the two file types.