Jalfrezi wrote:i went to a studio once to get a tune mixed down without normalising and the engineer was saying we shouldn't have the tracks so quiet as when going out of the computer it adds noise.Macc wrote:WHY normalise it though? Why do you need to?
does it actually cause problems when mastering? i would think they need it to be as loud as possible so that the noise level is as low as possible. not loud like brickwalling but just raising the level.
I guess it depends how you are going out of the computer... if you are playing it in real time out the CPU with shoddy A/D conversion onto tape, then some noise can be added that way, but that is an A/D issue, not normalizing issue. But if you FTP the engineer the WAV (or hand in a CD or whatever), there shouldn't be any extra noise. Most of the noise floor issues come from recording onto an analog medium and then boosting or ambient noise and/or hum from mic'ed acoustic instruments. None of those are relevant if you are doing everything ITB.
I take your point- that sure, being non-destructive, normalizing shouldn't be a problem.. but as Macc said - "Why?" The mastering engineer will probably just turn it down anyway (which is where you were to start with)...so why not just give the raw, well-mixed track?