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R128Gain

A few years back guys at hydrogenaudio debated that there will be no significant difference between the original replaygain algorithm and R128, but I guess they caved in due to the popularity and wides spread use of R128. Actually, I've been wondering what the playout companies are waiting for and why they don't already have the R128 normalizing built-in. Particularly since some companies already have their own RMS/loudness normalization (such as RCS Zetta or P2 Myriad), it really doesn't make sense not to make it compliant to the ITU 1770-2 standard...


Regards,
Goran Tomas
 
oooooh! For some of us sitting over at the edge of the audience, this is deep stuff. Help point me in the right direction as this is new to me.

Does R128Gain give me a consistent playback from all audio-tracks in a folder, or does it actually go in and modify the existing files so that when I put them on another playback device, they still playback at a consistent level without special software in-place on the playback device?

Or have I completely missed the whole point of R128Gain?
 
Goat Rodeo Cowboy said:
Does R128Gain give me a consistent playback from all audio-tracks in a folder, or does it actually go in and modify the existing files so that when I put them on another playback device, they still playback at a consistent level without special software in-place on the playback device?
With lossy files, it will insert a tag into the file that tells the ReplayGain supporting player how loud it is, so that the player can adjust it without having any loss of quality in the original file. The drawback is that you have to have a player that supports it. There is one neat thing that mp3 provides, which is scale factor, so you CAN actually adjust the loudness of an mp3 file without re-encoding it. And it will play back properly on any mp3 player without the need for ReplayGain support. Scale factor changes and ReplayGain can also co-exist together just fine, as it happens from the mp3Gain software. I haven't had a chance to try R128Gain yet to see if it supports that "hat trick" but I certainly hope it does.

For lossless files, there is the option of inserting a tag, but I don't know if there's much support for it on the playback side yet, besides in FLAC. I could be wrong about this re: ReplayGain capable players. I should know this. :) It's possible to simply change the gain, requantize to the target output bit depth, and save another file, but there is of course always the potential for audible quality loss if you're going to 16bit int.
 
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