And your friend? is wrong.  It's really that simple.  I've been a big
fan of replay gain for years and it works as it should. On albums you
want to keep the same sound levels that it's recorded as.  When playing
tracks from many albums you want an constant sound level that doesn't
blow you away with drastic changes.   He may be right in saying it's
not perfect but when playing tracks who cares?  I don't want the sound
going up and down in huge changes.  He likes it that way, more power to
him.  It's not the right way for listening to random tracks.  The sound
levels are not measured against other albums so I like to equalize
them. It makes listening much better.  I've heard this arguement from
the audiophools before and it doesnt' hold water.  Do what you enjoy
and don't buy $1000 power cords either.


-- 
Nonreality

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