Re: Not enough volume
This is excellent information, thank you. I've been using dBpoweramp CD ripper exclusively for my own library and for when I rip client CD collections. If I haven't mentioned it I'm an AV Integrator and pretty much use Sonos exclusively for house audio distribution and I improve audio quality with the use of higher performance external amps, speakers, etc. It's mainly the fact that there is no control programming involved and the clients understand the interface! With that said, since I began by ripping my own 700+ CD collection I've since done all rips in FLAC and ALAC but never added RG tags. For clients I usually give them ALAC because 90% of them are Mac users - MBP's, iPads, iPhones, etc. and might want to use the files for other purposes on the Apple devices they own. And frankly I've never had a client complain about varying volume levels but now that I've learned about the RG capabilities in dBpoweramp it is more about providing the capability in the event it is needed down the road and just my desire to learn about all of these features.
As you suggest, there are so many variables that I just need to do what would work for the client (or my) environment. I have a couple of questions:
1. Is it possible to add RG tags to a CD library that I've already ripped to uncompressed FLAC (or ALAC for that matter)?
2. I only see the RG tag options that are selectable in the settings dropdown area of the Replay Gain DSP option. Are there other options that I could apply if I knew the specific playback environment.
3. Regarding adding RG tags to FLAC during ripping, does it matter what encoding level I use, for example Lossless uncompressed vs Lossless Level 5 (default in CD ripper) and/or is audio quality affected by using one FLAC compression level over another?
Also, I thought AIFF was the older codec that doesn't support meta data and ID tagging as well as the newer ALAC so why doesn't Apple support it in iTunNorm, but wait were talking about Apple.
Thanks again for the info, very helpful!
This is excellent information, thank you. I've been using dBpoweramp CD ripper exclusively for my own library and for when I rip client CD collections. If I haven't mentioned it I'm an AV Integrator and pretty much use Sonos exclusively for house audio distribution and I improve audio quality with the use of higher performance external amps, speakers, etc. It's mainly the fact that there is no control programming involved and the clients understand the interface! With that said, since I began by ripping my own 700+ CD collection I've since done all rips in FLAC and ALAC but never added RG tags. For clients I usually give them ALAC because 90% of them are Mac users - MBP's, iPads, iPhones, etc. and might want to use the files for other purposes on the Apple devices they own. And frankly I've never had a client complain about varying volume levels but now that I've learned about the RG capabilities in dBpoweramp it is more about providing the capability in the event it is needed down the road and just my desire to learn about all of these features.
As you suggest, there are so many variables that I just need to do what would work for the client (or my) environment. I have a couple of questions:
1. Is it possible to add RG tags to a CD library that I've already ripped to uncompressed FLAC (or ALAC for that matter)?
2. I only see the RG tag options that are selectable in the settings dropdown area of the Replay Gain DSP option. Are there other options that I could apply if I knew the specific playback environment.
3. Regarding adding RG tags to FLAC during ripping, does it matter what encoding level I use, for example Lossless uncompressed vs Lossless Level 5 (default in CD ripper) and/or is audio quality affected by using one FLAC compression level over another?
Also, I thought AIFF was the older codec that doesn't support meta data and ID tagging as well as the newer ALAC so why doesn't Apple support it in iTunNorm, but wait were talking about Apple.
Thanks again for the info, very helpful!
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