Discuss technical issues with the community. Mixvibes staff provides no support on this board.
by rhopkins on 17 May 2015, 00:48
Question 2 of the day. For some time now I've had this issue and I just can't figure it out. I feel like I must be being a n00b DJ! Every mix I record is a lot quieter than any other audio track I might listen to. I've experimented a lot and I can't push the Master Volume in Cross any higher without tripping the volume warning indicator on my U-Mix Control Pro 2 - and of course I can see me hitting the reds in Cross. It means I'm always having to adjust the Master Volume throughout a mix...now "Gain" I hear you shout. If I have the option ticked, isn't Cross supposed to manage this between tracks? I feel like it really isn't. I'm willing to be taught a lesson here, whether it's just how to manage this in general or technically with Cross and my controller. But at the moment I'm getting really frustrated about 1) Low overall mix volume and 2) Noticeable differences in volumes between tracks. PS Nearly all of my tracks are purchased from the iTunes store, or at the very least all good quality so I don't think this is the cause.
MacBook Pro - 15" (Mid 2014) 2.2Ghz Processor 16GB RAM
U-Mix Control Pro 2 Cross 3.3.10
-
rhopkins


-
- Posts: 532
- Joined: 28 Jan 2011, 14:10
- Location: Brisbane
-
by daniel clark on 17 May 2015, 01:15
 hopefully the track are anyalised for gain ,, which should keep then realitively the same ,, i know you know how to adjust the track gain in the info section of the software ,, to compensate for track levels that are not properly set by the anyalise ,,  happens  due to the nature of the anylise /track ,,you can tell if the track anylise is off by the signal meters in the fader section ,, as for recording levels ,, have seen when rec samples within Cross the levels are low ,i adjust the track/sample gain to compensate ,, overall the recorded mix i find is slightly lower also ,, but by anylising the rec it is adjusted ,, ,, maybe that me compensating for this ,, but havent had much difficulty in thease issues 
  January 2012 Mixvibes DJ of the month MEMBER OF:  C00l People MV Society  2014 dell XPS8700 intel core i5 4400@3.10ghz 12 gigs DDR3 ram NVDIA GeForce GT635 Win 10 /64 bits OS Realteck 7.1 Home USB sound dogle Asus VE247H monitor Logitec G-15 ser 1 gaming keyboard U-Mix Control Pro 2
-

daniel clark


-
- Posts: 6861
- Joined: 31 Oct 2008, 01:01
- Location: Charleston,S C
-
by rhopkins on 17 May 2015, 02:02
Tracks are analysed for gain. I'm tempted to turn off read track gain option and see.
I just get wary when the limit light comes on as the sound will start to clip/distort on the recording, right? Or does it warn too early?!
MacBook Pro - 15" (Mid 2014) 2.2Ghz Processor 16GB RAM
U-Mix Control Pro 2 Cross 3.3.10
-
rhopkins


-
- Posts: 532
- Joined: 28 Jan 2011, 14:10
- Location: Brisbane
-
by rhopkins on 17 May 2015, 03:58
daniel clark wrote::cool: have you tried adjusting the recorded track gain to play at a higher volume ,, 
This is the thing, I can't because I've pushed the Master Volume right to the edge. I edit the recording in Audacity - if I amplify clipping occurs. So, sounds like trick is to record low and then amplify outside Cross?
MacBook Pro - 15" (Mid 2014) 2.2Ghz Processor 16GB RAM
U-Mix Control Pro 2 Cross 3.3.10
-
rhopkins


-
- Posts: 532
- Joined: 28 Jan 2011, 14:10
- Location: Brisbane
-
by rhopkins on 17 May 2015, 09:28
RoJeC wrote:Could it be the track gain of the mix that is analysed to low. As mixes easily have some longer silence at beginning or end the analysis results in -12db.
In Audacity you should be able to see track volume for original and recording.
I'm not listening to my mixes in Cross :-) I'm listening in iTunes or via Spotify as a local file. Compared to other tracks my recordings are significantly lower in volume, even bough the master volume during the recording was as high as it could be without triggering the warning light on my UMCP2.
MacBook Pro - 15" (Mid 2014) 2.2Ghz Processor 16GB RAM
U-Mix Control Pro 2 Cross 3.3.10
-
rhopkins


-
- Posts: 532
- Joined: 28 Jan 2011, 14:10
- Location: Brisbane
-
by Blackbrook on 17 May 2015, 09:33
I always tend to use the master output at 0dB having head room for any adjustments. Therefore the overall output is lower, but using audacity I can amplify without receiving clicks.
Your last sets all sounded alright, nothing concerning in
Viele Grüße, Cheers, A plus, Steve Winner Mixvibes 10 years DJ contest 2009
-
Blackbrook
-
- Posts: 4417
- Joined: 25 Dec 2007, 14:33
by rhopkins on 17 May 2015, 09:50
Blackbrook wrote:I always tend to use the master output at 0dB having head room for any adjustments. Therefore the overall output is lower, but using audacity I can amplify without receiving clicks.
Your last sets all sounded alright, nothing concerning in
Hi! ;-) I always assumed I must've been failing in some way if I had to do that but it's fine if I have to. Dumb question, how do you know the master output is at 0dB?
MacBook Pro - 15" (Mid 2014) 2.2Ghz Processor 16GB RAM
U-Mix Control Pro 2 Cross 3.3.10
-
rhopkins


-
- Posts: 532
- Joined: 28 Jan 2011, 14:10
- Location: Brisbane
-
Return to Community Support
Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 9 guests
|
|
|