I have made some recordings of a live performance with choir and orchestra and imported them into Audacity. As far as I can see the levels are about right, and there's hardly any overloading, but some peaks go close to the limit. Clapping - which I'm less worried about, maybe pushes over the limit.
I was given a similar recording made last year on CD, and I thought the levels on that CD were very low. Is there any extra gain parameter to use when actually burning CDs, or should I just burn the Audacity files to CD "as is", even if this does give a seemingly low level of output? Maybe I'm just noticing the real effect of wide dynamic range - even in amateur performances - of recordings of classical music. I am concerned that some listeners may say that the volume level of the final recording will be too low, yet the evidence from the tools I'm using is that it's very representative of the actual levels in the recording venue. I certainly do not want to normalise the levels or do anything to tinker with the levels in order to create the CDs for this year's performances, though some listeners may prefer to have a more compressed sound and higher mean levels.
I was given a similar recording made last year on CD, and I thought the levels on that CD were very low. Is there any extra gain parameter to use when actually burning CDs, or should I just burn the Audacity files to CD "as is", even if this does give a seemingly low level of output? Maybe I'm just noticing the real effect of wide dynamic range - even in amateur performances - of recordings of classical music. I am concerned that some listeners may say that the volume level of the final recording will be too low, yet the evidence from the tools I'm using is that it's very representative of the actual levels in the recording venue. I certainly do not want to normalise the levels or do anything to tinker with the levels in order to create the CDs for this year's performances, though some listeners may prefer to have a more compressed sound and higher mean levels.
Comment