
I did not write this new program, so please do not email me any support questions about it. The author of MP3Doctor recently renamed his "SuperMp3Normalizer" program to " Mp3Gain PRO". There is no quality lost in the change because the program adjusts the mp3 file directly, Instead, it does some statisticalĪnalysis to determine how loud the file actually sounds to the human ear.Īlso, the changes MP3Gain makes are completely lossless. MP3Gain analyzes and adjusts mp3 files so that they have the same volume.Īs many normalizers do. If you use the global EQ, make sure to lower the gain if you boost frequencies.Tired of reaching for your volume knob every time your mp3 player changes to a new song? Song volume together with playlist volume should not exceed +6dB in sum. What do I recommend? Stay with Mp3Gain, use 89dB as the normalization value, render changes into the file and import into Stage Traxx via iTunes Filesharing or Dropbox. And that operation is lossless and can be reverted. You can work around this by rendering the ReplayGain settings into the file. Please note, ST2 does not read ReplayGain values. Try to stay around 0dB for at least song or playlist volume. If both are set to +6 dB and you play a track that also has maxed volume, it will most probably distort. The default value 89,0dB is usually a safe value where no distortion should occur.ĭistortion can also occur if you max out song volume and playlist volume in Stage Traxx. When you say that Mp3Gain resulted in distortion, then you chose a normalization level that was too high. If it is just distortion caused by using a too high normalization level, then yes, it will be able to do that, but Mp3Gain can also do that. At least if the distortion is part of the audio track itself. I don't know Platinum Notes but I seriously doubt that it can remove distortion.
