|
|
Re: Setting gain levels for recording and mixing [message #103828 is a reply to message #103827] |
Sun, 19 July 2009 23:30 |
|
I've gathered the impression that some of the PARIS mojo is *directly* related to the concepts detailed here, and that this is a case of conventional DAW wisdom catching up to what the designers of PARIS already had figured out over a decade ago:
Quote: | - The digital signal from your audio interface into your sequencer's individual recording tracks should be set at -12 to -18dB on the input meters for each track being recorded. Don't go near -6dB and certainly don't get anywhere near 0dB when tracking.
- The digital signal in your sequencer's Master meter should peak at -6dB when creating your mixdown. If you go over -6dB peak on the Master, lower the volume of all your tracks slightly, and equally, to reduce the summed volume of all tracks as needed to keep the Master peaking at -6dB
- Render your mixdown to a WAV or AIFF file still at -6dB because normalization and limiting from within all major sequencers is pretty weak.
|
"... being bitter is like swallowing poison and waiting for the other guy to die..." - anon
|
|
|