but itunes makes the adjustments, they are not actually made to the sound file itself, which is what you want to do. Though, the volume/eq adjustments do stay if you play the cd through itunes. I've just made a few experiments and i have learned that the EQ AND the preamp are indeed ignored during burning (as pointed out above). I know there will be some degree of distortion from boosting the pre-amp, but will that distortion be permanent once I've boosted it? In other words, can it always go back to normal, or will I be re-distorting everytime I bring it down, and then up again? If I'm boosting the pre-amp on tracks to get a higher volume - there will probably be some fine-tuning where I'll be bringing it up, then down, then back up to get it right. ![]() And it would be nice to have everything more uniform for the ipod too. The EQ adjustment looks helpful - I DO want to burn quick and easy playlists - its just when I come across a particular album that is way too quiet, I'd like to be able to fix it so if I throw a song from that album on a mix at some point, I don't have to go turn the stereo up - and then back down when the song is over. Ok, well Soundcheck is a utility to get the volumes of tracks in a playlist to be uniform, but it only works if the volumes of tracks in a playlist are already uniform? I don't understand that at all. Not really made for that and you'd have to import to Garageband, adjust the level, export to iTunes then convert from AIFF back to AAC (or whatever). You might have something already on your computer to do this very well, like garageband. No need to re-analyze since nothing has changed in the original file. Select the songs, run iVolume, set the level to what you want and it changes. However, if for some reason you wanted to change the level, you can readjust them very easily (at least in iVolume). Not sure why you waould want to re-analyze each song since nothing has changed. Ideally, you want a program to adjust the volume of each track, every time you come to burn a new compilation. ![]() It's exactly what they are made for, they are very, very useful for doing this and they work very well. Plus, i haven't used them - has anyone reading used it and is happy with it? it claims to be very very useful for stuff like this. Set the volume to what you want and they analyze and adjust each song to that level. These adjust each song (or album, you pick) independent of the others. It simply puts a number in the tags for iTunes to use.īecause every compilation is different,and every combination of songs will throw up the need to re-adjust ![]() Neither of these actually messes with the actual file. I'd be wary of programs like ivolume & mp3gain
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