@cleeds Please do not confuse me with facts.......;-)
But I am confused now. So help me out. Seriously, I'm trying to understand.
A piece of music gets DR compressed. That means the range of lowest to highest volume is narrowed. In general this leads to an overall increase in loudness.
This makes the quiet bits closer to the louder bits. This helps with low end devices and to overcome ambient noise.
But when played through most iPhones the volume is normalized which basically means the volume is decreased relative to non-compressed songs. So when it is normalized those quieter bits are made quieter.
That would seem to defeat to a large extent the desired effect of compression.
I understand that the compression makes the quiet bits louder _relative_ to the louder bits but if all of it is 'turned down' by normalization then the quieter bits are turned down too.
What have I got wrong here?
But I am confused now. So help me out. Seriously, I'm trying to understand.
A piece of music gets DR compressed. That means the range of lowest to highest volume is narrowed. In general this leads to an overall increase in loudness.
This makes the quiet bits closer to the louder bits. This helps with low end devices and to overcome ambient noise.
But when played through most iPhones the volume is normalized which basically means the volume is decreased relative to non-compressed songs. So when it is normalized those quieter bits are made quieter.
That would seem to defeat to a large extent the desired effect of compression.
I understand that the compression makes the quiet bits louder _relative_ to the louder bits but if all of it is 'turned down' by normalization then the quieter bits are turned down too.
What have I got wrong here?