I've bought The Novella Reservoir, and I think it's great. However, it seems to be a victim of the loudness war.
In case you're not familiar with the loudness war, it's a music industry trend which started as a pissing contest between records executives about who would release the loudest album. However, many small producers/mastering engineers today are producing albums with little dynamic range, seemingly oblivious to the fact that this permanently degrades the sound quality.
Recommended reading: http://www.cdmasteringservices.com/dynamicrange.htm
Watch these two short informative videos:
Loudness war explanation: www.youtube.com/watch?v=3Gmex_4hreQ&fmt=18
Metallica comparison: www.youtube.com/watch?v=DRyIACDCc1I&fmt=18
Examples of metal songs with good dynamic range:
Annihilator - King Of The Kill (listen: www.youtube.com/watch?v=YXtRBVJkukY&fmt=18 )
Stormlord - Dance Of Hecate (listen: www.youtube.com/watch?v=tysvzUk-AcY&fmt=18 )
Death - Individual Thought Patterns (listen: www.youtube.com/watch?v=SOSjntSpxT8&fmt=18 )
I think it's a shame that recent ND records are crippled by excessive loudness. I hope you can consider leaving more dynamic range on future releases.
About Into Night's Requiem Infernal:
I listened to Empathy's Greed, and it's really a great track, except the mastering is quite bad (even worst than The Novella Reservoir). I'm afraid the whole album will be like that.
Also, I read here that Paul hates the sound of MP3s, which is a minor issue compared to impact of bad mastering. If the mastering sucks, encoding an MP3 at 128 or 320kbps won't make much difference. And as a listener, I have control over which format I use. But I don't have a choice about the mastering. Once the sound is damaged, there nothing I can do except hope for a remastering, which almost never happens.
Thoughts?
In case you're not familiar with the loudness war, it's a music industry trend which started as a pissing contest between records executives about who would release the loudest album. However, many small producers/mastering engineers today are producing albums with little dynamic range, seemingly oblivious to the fact that this permanently degrades the sound quality.
Recommended reading: http://www.cdmasteringservices.com/dynamicrange.htm
Watch these two short informative videos:
Loudness war explanation: www.youtube.com/watch?v=3Gmex_4hreQ&fmt=18
Metallica comparison: www.youtube.com/watch?v=DRyIACDCc1I&fmt=18
Examples of metal songs with good dynamic range:
Annihilator - King Of The Kill (listen: www.youtube.com/watch?v=YXtRBVJkukY&fmt=18 )
Stormlord - Dance Of Hecate (listen: www.youtube.com/watch?v=tysvzUk-AcY&fmt=18 )
Death - Individual Thought Patterns (listen: www.youtube.com/watch?v=SOSjntSpxT8&fmt=18 )
I think it's a shame that recent ND records are crippled by excessive loudness. I hope you can consider leaving more dynamic range on future releases.
About Into Night's Requiem Infernal:
I listened to Empathy's Greed, and it's really a great track, except the mastering is quite bad (even worst than The Novella Reservoir). I'm afraid the whole album will be like that.
Also, I read here that Paul hates the sound of MP3s, which is a minor issue compared to impact of bad mastering. If the mastering sucks, encoding an MP3 at 128 or 320kbps won't make much difference. And as a listener, I have control over which format I use. But I don't have a choice about the mastering. Once the sound is damaged, there nothing I can do except hope for a remastering, which almost never happens.
Thoughts?