Lol: "The following text is printed inside the digipak packaging of metal band Iced Earth's single I Walk Among You: "This is a dynamic metal record! Play it loud!!! (We refuse to ruin our production by compressing the hell out of it so that it's mastered at ridiculous volumes! That kills the vibe and dynamics of the mix. Just turn it up on your stereo!)"

Lol: "The following text is printed inside the digipak packaging of metal band Iced Earth's single I Walk Among You: "This is a dynamic metal record! Play it loud!!! (We refuse to ruin our production by compressing the hell out of it so that it's mastered at ridiculous volumes! That kills the vibe and dynamics of the mix. Just turn it up on your stereo!)"
I'm not too surprised by that; Jon Schaffer is an old-school guy and a huge gearhead.the only downside to having lots of dynamics is that you have to constantly adjust volume. i was djing some music for a friends party, and noticed some songs i would set to a decent level, then a louder part would come, and it was clip central.
That's why you normally DJ with peaks at -6db or -9db ...
What I usually do is "calibrate" the system before the party with one of my own tracks that is insanely loud and smashed. I play it and set the gain on the mixer to hit -9db as a max. I then raise the volume on the power amps to the level that I want the music to be in the club. If I play older/softer tracks, I have a lot of headroom to adjust and make them louder because I know that I have 9db above the loudest possible songs ...
unfortunately im using a shitty beringer 350 watt p.a head that for can only go so loud before the output meter clips 
It would be nice if AES could come up with some sort of standard....
....and figure out a way for the labels to buy into it.
Yeah, i'm slowly backing away from the loudness too.. i mean, when there is no dynamic difference between a blastbeat part and the breakdown after it, then i'm calling it quits...