





David wrote:Agreed!! I've been lobbying Apple to default Normalizing to off ever since the feature was introduced. Doesn't make sense to have Normalize pre-selected in a pro app IMO.

Eriksimon wrote:They could give it some sophistication by also being able to set a ceiling for it...
In fact, the code is already there...
ski wrote:http://www.logicprohelp.com/forum/viewtopic.php?p=438173#p438173

ceiling... code...


Yes, Ski, that all makes sense for a professional workflow, but don't forget many of us do it all ourselves, and never deliver anything to others.
What I especially dislike about this "checkbox only" option is that the user has no influence over, and is not even informed about how much deciBel are going to be added or subtracted...

ski wrote:Erik wrote:Yes, Ski, that all makes sense for a professional workflow, but don't forget many of us do it all ourselves, and never deliver anything to others.
Yes, but even if you don't deliver your tracks to other people, there's still no reason to have normalizing on all the time. Well, almost none... the only time I can see this being of use is if you're making sample libraries, and you want to bounce out a whole bunch of normalized regions for the purpose of having a consistent level between samples. Other than that, there are very few reasons to normalize anything, even for the non-professional.
Erik wrote:What I especially dislike about this "checkbox only" option is that the user has no influence over, and is not even informed about how much deciBel are going to be added or subtracted...
Ski wrote:Still, I have to ask, what purpose would it serve to set a fixed ceiling on the normalization process? Say you have two tracks, virtual instruments: electric guitar and synth pad. The guitar part peaks at -12 and the pad at -6. You want to bounce out those parts and bring them back into Logic as audio regions. So let's say you had a ceiling of -6 on the normalizing feature. After the bounce you would lose the difference in level between the guitar and pad because they're now both peaking at -6: the pad hasn't changed at all because it was peaking at -6 before the bounce, but the guitar is now 6 dB louder than it was before. See what I'm saying?


ski wrote:Excellent! You fell right into my little trap! (insert evil mad scientist laughter here)<--- evil
Seriously tho, I deliberately left out a key factor... I gave you some facts, of one track peaking at -12, the other at -6. But let's say you were doing this on your own. How would you know that those were the peak levels for those tracks? Well...


jschmidtiii wrote:so...is there a setting you can change so that your bounces aren't normalized by default?


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