As someone who downloads or buys their music to listen to via VLC, it’s quite annoying when the volume level between files aren’t consistent. Especially when I’m unable to easily to change the volume like when I’m doing physical labor as an example. So it can go from a perfectly reasonable volume, to damaging my ears, and then to where I can barely hear. I was thinking of going in and manually editing them myself to be consistent amongst each other at some point, but then it got me thinking. Is there an application that will equalize the volume on your audio files for you? If not, would anyone else have a use for one besides me? I’d love to know either way.

  • Dr Jekell@lemmy.world
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    15 hours ago

    Replaygain doesn’t change the file itself.

    It is a measurement of the files audio volume against a set level. Then the file gets a tag (metadata) for the volume adjustment.

    To put it simply: ReplayGain turns up the volume an appropriate amount when playing a relatively quieter song/album and turns down the volume an appropriate amount when playing a relatively louder song/album.

    Pretty much any music player should support replaygain including VLC.

    https://www.reddit.com/r/headphones/comments/962a0c/replaygain_the_solution_to_constantly_changing/

    • Scipitie@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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      15 hours ago

      Ah but this means if I can’t control the client (i.e. because I’ve setup a streaming server) then it’s not a solution for me - but I’d I do then this is the cleaner one because it doesn’t reencode the files.

      Understood, thank you!

      • Dr Jekell@lemmy.world
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        14 hours ago

        I can’t say that I haven’t thought about audio volume correction for streaming audio.

        There must be a way of doing it as Spotify and other services have a version of replay gain.