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Showing posts with label Loudness Loudness. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Loudness Loudness. Show all posts

Examples of Loud Albums


Below are the albums that received criticism in terms of loudness. Hope can be a material comparison and correction for those of you who have one collection of albums are:

I took from wikipedia and called the sentence: "Some of the albums have been criticized for That Their sound quality include the following:"

The Loudness War Criticism

Alternate TextAnd the phenomenon of the loudness war will end soon, because it has a lot of critics who condemn the ways of thinking about it. Here's an excerpt criticism:

This practice has been condemned by several recording industry professionals including Alan Parsons, Geoff Emerick (noted for his work with The Beatles from Revolver to Abbey Road), and mastering engineers Doug Sax, Steve Hoffman, and many others, including music audiophiles, hi-fi enthusiasts, and fans. Musician Bob Dylan has also condemned the practice, saying: "You listen to these modern records, they're atrocious, they have sound all over them. There's no definition of nothing, no vocal, no nothing, just like—static." Nonetheless, the compact disc editions of Dylan's more recent albums "Love and Theft", Modern Times and Together Through Life are all examples of heavy dynamic range compression.

History of The Loudness War

History of The Loudness War
A phenomenon always has a history, at the start? I just wanted to hear "when it ends". Because of the growing development of the recording equipment of course the greater problem of the loudness war. Here's an excerpt from wikipedia about the history of the loudness war:

The Loudness War?


What is a "loudness war"? first let us look into wikipedia. The following quotation:
The loudness war or loudness race is a pejorative name for the apparent competition to digitally master and release recordings with increasing loudness.