Why do certain songs sound louder than others even when they’re played at the same volume?

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Why do certain songs sound louder than others even when they’re played at the same volume?

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Anonymous 0 Comments

2 main things. 1, the amount of limiting/compression. Compression (and limiting, which is the same as compression, just more extreme) is essentially done by making the loud parts of music quiet, so you can make the quiet parts loud. That is, there is a defined peak loudness that a sound can have. If we take the loudest parts of the sound and smash them down, we can raise the overall loudness of the sound. Imagine recording a gunshot. The very first few milliseconds of the recorded sound are massive, but the rest of the sound (99% of the sound) is much smaller. If we take those first few milliseconds and squish them down, we can raise the entire sound wave.

Next: Perceived loudness vs actual loudness. By limiting the peaks, we’re bringing up the rest of the signal. Even though we have a defined peak (in digital audio there are only so many bits in a sample), we can make it sound louder. If you look at a waveform of a song that hasn’t been limited, it has lots of peaks and troughs of varying magnitudes. If you look at the waveform of a mastered (heavily limited) song, it looks like a sausage. The songs are both the same loudness, but the squished one sounds louder.

Hope this helps. Source: multiple Grammy nominated recording engineer.

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