Stereo Tracks (volume issue)
Posted: Wed Aug 06, 2008 6:42 pm
I use audacity in creating my very own pieces of music in which I record many things and put it all together to form my very own pieces of music which takes tremendous amount of time and effort. My pieces of music can be very complex and can contain up to 15 stereo tracks.
Now I do prefer stereo over mono as stereo offers more depth, but not knowing that stereo is actually bad. I have recently created a piece of music and I noticed that when listening to it on a few computers, the stereo tracks all vary in volume. It seems as though the more depth a stereo track has (in which the waveforms in both the left and right channels are more different), the less that track can be heard (unlike on my computer in which all the tracks sound just fine). And as for stereo tracks that contain waveforms more similar in both the left and right channels, the more those tracks can be heard on these other computers. Applying effects (such as wahwah or phaser which is obviously necessary for me in creating music) adds more depth which makes it less heard on other computers. And I've also recorded some audio enhanced by the ffdshow audio decoder with "Crystality" checked and set the "extra stereo" all the way up. And though it does sound louder on my computer, that extra stereo effect made that audio very quiet on these other computers.
I tried setting everything to mono (in which I split all the stereo tracks and set all the channels to mono), but the result was still the same on these computers. I not only worked extremely hard in making this piece of music, but I also worked very hard in adjusting the volumes of all the stereo tracks that make up this piece of music on my computer--but only to hear my piece of music containing stereo tracks with completely inaccurate volumes on these other computers which was very disappointing to me. I mean, now I realize that I should of started out in recording in mono from the very beginning because looking back now, there was one other piece of music I did in mono which actually did sound the same on other computers. Therefore, is there any way to get the volumes of these stereo tracks to be the same just like on my computer (like another method to convert them all into mono just as if I recorded everything in mono to begin with)?
Now I do prefer stereo over mono as stereo offers more depth, but not knowing that stereo is actually bad. I have recently created a piece of music and I noticed that when listening to it on a few computers, the stereo tracks all vary in volume. It seems as though the more depth a stereo track has (in which the waveforms in both the left and right channels are more different), the less that track can be heard (unlike on my computer in which all the tracks sound just fine). And as for stereo tracks that contain waveforms more similar in both the left and right channels, the more those tracks can be heard on these other computers. Applying effects (such as wahwah or phaser which is obviously necessary for me in creating music) adds more depth which makes it less heard on other computers. And I've also recorded some audio enhanced by the ffdshow audio decoder with "Crystality" checked and set the "extra stereo" all the way up. And though it does sound louder on my computer, that extra stereo effect made that audio very quiet on these other computers.
I tried setting everything to mono (in which I split all the stereo tracks and set all the channels to mono), but the result was still the same on these computers. I not only worked extremely hard in making this piece of music, but I also worked very hard in adjusting the volumes of all the stereo tracks that make up this piece of music on my computer--but only to hear my piece of music containing stereo tracks with completely inaccurate volumes on these other computers which was very disappointing to me. I mean, now I realize that I should of started out in recording in mono from the very beginning because looking back now, there was one other piece of music I did in mono which actually did sound the same on other computers. Therefore, is there any way to get the volumes of these stereo tracks to be the same just like on my computer (like another method to convert them all into mono just as if I recorded everything in mono to begin with)?