DV Info Net

DV Info Net (https://www.dvinfo.net/forum/)
-   All Things Audio (https://www.dvinfo.net/forum/all-things-audio/)
-   -   Software technique to average varying degrees of amplitude in a track to one level? (https://www.dvinfo.net/forum/all-things-audio/520571-software-technique-average-varying-degrees-amplitude-track-one-level.html)

James Palanza December 10th, 2013 09:34 PM

Software technique to average varying degrees of amplitude in a track to one level?
 
Okay not sure if I'm asking this correctly, I'm a tad weak in the audio department, but is there a nifty method in either Audacity, Premier, or Adobe Audition that would automatically take lets say, the softest parts of a track and boost them to the same level as the loudest? For instance, when two people are speaking into a mic and one is slightly farther away, I always have to manually go in and rubberband the one speaker up when they talk, and then back down for the other.

Any way to automate this?
Is this called "normalization"?

Jim Michael December 10th, 2013 09:47 PM

Re: Software technique to average varying degrees of amplitude in a track to one leve
 
There is a way to automate this using normalize as a command line parameter in sox. SoX There is also a normalize filter in Audacity, but I seem to recall something that was a levels adjustment that didn't have quite as strong or global effect. Maybe someone else has a suggestion for something a little more refined?

Nate Haustein December 10th, 2013 10:45 PM

Re: Software technique to average varying degrees of amplitude in a track to one leve
 
Isn't this what a compressor filter does? Crank up the ratio and it should do what you're asking.

Also, I've used this in the past and it's pretty darn slick: http://web.archive.org/web/201307292...org/levelator/

Duane Adam December 10th, 2013 11:01 PM

Re: Software technique to average varying degrees of amplitude in a track to one leve
 
Compressor.

Chris Luker December 10th, 2013 11:23 PM

Re: Software technique to average varying degrees of amplitude in a track to one leve
 
Compressor for sure.

Rick Reineke December 11th, 2013 11:07 AM

Re: Software technique to average varying degrees of amplitude in a track to one leve
 
Peak normalization and RMS normalization are different. In some app.s (Sound Forge Pro for instance), The RMS normalize process can add dynamic compression. I much prefer to add compression with a good compressor plug-in where one has control over the parameters. Volume envelopes can be added to the timeline to manually normalize differences in amplitude as well.

James Palanza December 11th, 2013 11:23 AM

Re: Software technique to average varying degrees of amplitude in a track to one leve
 
Thanks everyone for the suggestions, going to give it a whirl tonight.

Dave Farrants December 11th, 2013 12:49 PM

Re: Software technique to average varying degrees of amplitude in a track to one leve
 
The Levelator from The Conversations Network works well on speech without any messing around.

Christopher Young December 12th, 2013 08:58 AM

Re: Software technique to average varying degrees of amplitude in a track to one leve
 
The "Levelator". Will second that for sure. Used a lot in the radio industry. Export a .WAV from your timeline, run it through Levelator and bring it back in to your timeline, adjust final output level. Quick, clean simple.

Chris Young
CYV Productions
Sydney


All times are GMT -6. The time now is 11:57 AM.

DV Info Net -- Real Names, Real People, Real Info!
1998-2024 The Digital Video Information Network