Welcome to Doom9's Forum, THE in-place to be for everyone interested in DVD conversion.

Before you start posting please read the forum rules. By posting to this forum you agree to abide by the rules.

 

Go Back   Doom9's Forum > Video Encoding > (Auto) Gordian Knot

Reply
 
Thread Tools Search this Thread Display Modes
Old 15th January 2014, 12:38   #1  |  Link
osullic
Registered User
 
Join Date: May 2007
Posts: 27
Audio normalisation when backing up concert DVDs to MP3

At the risk of asking the obvious, I noticed that one of the steps that Auto Gordian Knot performs is to normalise the audio, and I was wondering why this is necessary.

Is it the case that audio encoded to commercial DVDs is somehow lower in volume than "normal"? Or is it just always good practice to perform audio normalisation?

What I have in mind here is several concert DVDs that I'd like to back up, both to AVI and to MP3. To get the MP3 audio, I was just going to retrieve the MP3 file from the agk_tmp folder that Auto Gordian Knot creates, and I'm just wondering if it might not be better to do it some other way in order to avoid the audio getting normalised. For comparison, when ripping CDs to MP3 with Exact Audio Copy and LAME, I don't perform any audio normalisation, so I'm wondering why/if I shouldn't also skip normalisation in the case of extracting audio from a DVD.

Sorry if I'm not understanding the process properly.

Last edited by osullic; 15th January 2014 at 23:13.
osullic is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 15th January 2014, 13:18   #2  |  Link
smok3
brontosaurusrex
 
smok3's Avatar
 
Join Date: Oct 2001
Posts: 2,392
Perhaps read on this https://tech.ebu.ch/loudness to get to the core of slippery named "normalization".
__________________
certain other member
smok3 is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 15th January 2014, 20:26   #3  |  Link
hello_hello
Registered User
 
Join Date: Mar 2011
Posts: 4,821
You can't stop AutoGK from "normalising" if it converts the audio, but if you elect to keep the original audio instead (AC3 etc), then obviously it won't. You could convert the AC3 to MP3 via other means if you don't want to normalise. For the record, AutoGK also downmixes multi channel audio to stereo using Prologic. I can't say I've ever tried to decode the stereo/Prologic audio to multi channel again, so I've no idea how well it works.

I don't like volume normalisation as a rule. Well for movies it's probably no big deal but for the audio of episodic video (multiple episodes on a DVD for example), normalising can adjust the volume of each slightly differently, or sometimes very differently, so I avoid normalising those.

If I'm converting stereo audio to stereo I leave the volume as it is. For downmixing 5.1ch to stereo...... well I don't do much of that these days given I don't encode with AutoGK any more (MeGUI and the x264 encoder instead).... but if I do downmix to stereo I re-encode while reducing the volume by 6dB to prevent any clipping which might result from the channels being combined (6dB seems to be enough). That way even if the volume changes a little as a result of downmixing, it changes by the same amount for every file I encode, so the relative volumes should remain unchanged.

I tend to do pretty much all of my audio encoding with foobar2000. It has a dsp for donwmixing to stereo which can be used when re-encoding, and you can adjust the volume manually. Foobar2000 doesn't normalise.

PS. Some programs (I'm not sure about AutoGK) downmix multichannel audio using a matrix which reduces the volume quite a bit (it's the prevent clipping thing again). If that's the case, normalising might be an idea, otherwise the volume might be very low.
hello_hello is offline   Reply With Quote
Reply

Tags
dvd audio, mp3, normalisation, normalization

Thread Tools Search this Thread
Search this Thread:

Advanced Search
Display Modes

Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

BB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off

Forum Jump


All times are GMT +1. The time now is 10:43.


Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.8.11
Copyright ©2000 - 2024, vBulletin Solutions Inc.