by wolfzell » Sat Aug 20, 2005 5:06 am
Easy solution:
Either analyze the volume for your files in MediaMonkey and use the volume adjusting in the menu. This way you only add a tag to the files which says MM how loud that song should be played in relation to the others. Switch off this option in the menu and listen to original volumes again. Files don't get changed except that change in the tags. Disadvantage is that this only works in MM because most other players ignore this tag. So if you transfer the files to a portable player, they have their original volume.
Alternative: Use MP3Gain to level your files. That freeware program can level MP3 files without re-encoding and is able to undo his own changes, so there is no quality loss involved if you want to change your files back to original volume.
http://mp3gain.sourceforge.net/
bye
Wolfgang
Easy solution:
Either analyze the volume for your files in MediaMonkey and use the volume adjusting in the menu. This way you only add a tag to the files which says MM how loud that song should be played in relation to the others. Switch off this option in the menu and listen to original volumes again. Files don't get changed except that change in the tags. Disadvantage is that this only works in MM because most other players ignore this tag. So if you transfer the files to a portable player, they have their original volume.
Alternative: Use MP3Gain to level your files. That freeware program can level MP3 files without re-encoding and is able to undo his own changes, so there is no quality loss involved if you want to change your files back to original volume.
[url]http://mp3gain.sourceforge.net/[/url]
bye
Wolfgang