7/28/2023 0 Comments Ivolume says itunes not installed![]() ![]() ![]() Both add meta data to the ID3 tag for the purpose of normalizing the volume during playback they don't actually change the audio data in the file. ReplayGain and SoundCheck are essentially supposed to do the same thing. I'm sorry, I thought, from your original question, that you wanted to rip your music with dbPowerAmp, and then figure out a way to use volume normalization in iTunes without using iTunes to calculate the SoundCheck values (as it doesn't work as well as ReplayGain). Thanks for your patience and any clarification. At the same time if I make everything the same level will I hear hissing or distortion because the audio is being forced, i.e. All I know is that when I check that little box (Soundcheck) in iTunes, I'm constantly having to adjust the volume knob up and down and it drives me bonkers. ![]() Or maybe Itunes Soundcheck will over write everything. If I Multi-Encode MP3 and Apple Lossless or FLAC, with just Volume Normalizer, will both the MP3 AND the Lossless file be altered or just the MP3? I think, if I understand correctly this would be the way to go if I'm using Itunes, but then again, if I have other random MP3 files I've received from friends, etc., this might not work either. However, if I have a lot of random MP3 files that were not encoded with Replay Gain and they come up in shuffle, they will sound quieter. If I use WinAmp or something that supports Replay Gain it will work and each track (I use shuffle A LOT so would I use track or album or both?) will be played at the same level. If I Multi-Encode MP3 and Apple Lossless or FLAC, with just Replay Gain, there will be a tag written somewhere in ?both? files. I don't know why this is stumping me to get. I'm sorry, I'm so confused with ReplayGain / Volume Normalizer. I wonder why someone would do that because wouldn't you want to not alter the file? If you use the VolumeNormalize DSP effect with the "ReplayGain" option chosen, the file is run through the ReplayGain effect, but instead of just tags being written, the audio itself is modified. Quote The ReplayGain DSP effect just writes tags to the file, and doesn't alter the audio itself. ![]()
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