![]() ![]() Loud drumming and trumpet fanfares at scene changes are suppressed. It was made specifically for podcasts to balance different voice microphones for level matching. The Levelator was made and released as Freeware but no longer in development. While doing that I found a software in as Freeware (most easily obtained from CNET as it is no longer developed) named with the catchy title The Levelator. But I have a question related to Goldwave specifically which follows I have made some progress on this topic and it is a bit of a crosspost for convenience. Please show how to do the correct operations described and in sequence. After MaxMatch the waveform in GW looks unchanged. To this point I have used GW with Maxmatch only- no file preparation just the WAV from the source. ![]() What is the current best practice to do this with a WAV file from a DVD? And in what sequence? Say you wanted to have a Personal Edition for use with headphones and a laptop or you are viewing late night and want the dialog at adequate level but everything else at moderate level- a sort of "Transformers" in reverse. My object media is spoken word on live stage from prerecorded performances. Normalize again to bring up the average levelĪnd that the Personal Edition would be appropriate for late night viewing etc without the tympany blasing after some dialog. Normalize (set peaks to 0db whcih GW calls "maximize") Personal Edition here means (according to one repsonse from a Goldwave user) My goal is to make a readable and repeatable process for making what I'm calling "Personal Edition" AVI files for movies. I have begun a project which may include creating a guide for those who want to do a specific task for WAV filesįrom DVD which are processed for Dynamic Range Compression (DRC.) Sometimes this is called Normalization and GW may have some specific naming conventions for it as well such as the MaxMatch and Match Volume features. ![]()
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