Export to .mp3 too loud

• Aug 5, 2018 - 02:40

I've noticed that any time that I export to an mp3, the mp3 volume is always much louder than the live playback. This has happened both for a recent composition for piano, and on a new orchestral piece I just started. For the piano composition I noticed the volume difference, but it was tolerable. For my orchestral piece, on the other hand, it is meant to start off nearly silent and slowly build in volume. I was able to achieve this in the live playback, but when I export to an mp3, everything sounds at least two dynamic levels higher.

Some info: I'm using a few different soundfonts and I increased the "wetness" setting in the synthesizer a little bit.

I have seen this brought up a couple times, but nothing has solved my problem, so any help would be greatly appreciated.


Comments

In reply to by Shoichi

Odd, I was able to download just now. Anyways, The soundfont I used for my piano composition was the HQ Orchestral soundfont. For the orchestral piece I'm using the General User, HQ Orchestral, and Sonatina Symphonic, as well as a small one that I can't seem to find a link to.

Before exporting from your musescore, click VIEW - MIXER, just to control the main volume of EACH intrument (apart from using relative sectional volumes(dynamics ppp, pp, p, mp, mf, etc.). Also, during audacity editing and and pre-exporting, each track(instrument) volume can be controlled if tracks(instruments) are captured by audacity one at a time; if not, your project's main volume may be turned up or down by applying a one-time audacity amplify-effect to the entire project before exporting.

In reply to by FreedomBuchanan

FWIW, it might be annoying to you when you listen to these back to back, but consider, that's not really the purpose of export to MP3. Exported MP3 files generally won't be listened to back-to-back with the playback from within MuseScore. Most likely, they'll be lsitened to back to back with other MP3 files, or other audio on the computer of whatever person happens to be listening to that MP3 file. Which is to say, the person listening to that MP3 files won't be comparing it to how loud the score was on your computer when you were working on it - he'll be comparing it to how loud other songs on his own computer are. That's the point of normalization.

In reply to by Marc Sabatella

I guess that's understandable, but it begs the question of why there isn't an option to turn off normalization. I've gone over multiple discussions on the same thing, and I haven't seen anything about a way to disable normalization. It's really annoying when I want something to start at a very low volume and slowly build to a moderate volume, but it makes everything start at a moderate volume and build to a loud one.

In reply to by FreedomBuchanan

It's only starting moderate and building to loud if you happen to have your speakers set the you currently do, based on the fact that you were recently listening to playback within MuseScore. Again, no one listening to that MP3 file is going to have their speakers set based on that. They are going to have their speakers set based on the things they listen to. There is no way to force others to listen to music at the same volume level you do, nor would it be wise for such an option to exist.

In reply to by Marc Sabatella

But in live playback, it sounds pretty much around what I want anywhere from 40-100% volume. At the upper range in volume it is a bit louder than I normally listen to it at, but it still gives the general effect that I want. On the other hand, the normalized mp3 starts off too loud sounding unless I put my volume down to at least 30% if not less. For the purpose of making an audio source for a score using certain soundfonts, I think it's perfectly reasonable to want an un-normalized mp3.

In reply to by Marc Sabatella

I think the volume they listen at IS relevant. I want them to be able to hear it the way I hear it, because that's the way it's meant to be heard. I don't care if my piece is really quiet relative to other things that they are listening to because it's meant to be very quiet. I want to make an mp3 so that I can use it as an audio source for the score when I post it on the website.

In reply to by FreedomBuchanan

Again, you won't be able to guarantee they hear it the same volume as you do, because you have no idea how loud their system volume is, how big their speakers are, what their listening environment is like, etc. For many different reasons, different people like to listen at different volumes. You might not care, but people won't generally like it if they have to turn up (or down) the volume on their computer just to hear your song at a volume consistent with how they generally like to listen. If you really want to force them to do that, you can use Audacity, but I strongly recommend against it. Normalization is universally done in the audio industry for good reason. Someday we may indeed provide an option to turn it off, but I will continue to storngly encourage people not to abuse it in this way.

In reply to by Marc Sabatella

That does make sense, but I've tried it on a few devices and on all of them it sounds approximately the same. Minor differences in volume, but nothing drastic. Obviously I can't guarantee the volume will be correct on all devices, but I can make a rough approximate that falls in a good middle-ground. I'll stop persisting on this since it's obviously not going anywhere, just keep in mind that there are special cases like me where pianissimo needs to actually mean pianissimo. Thanks for offering your time to discuss and explain the reasoning behind this problem.

In reply to by FreedomBuchanan

This is the big question. There's a checkbox for normalization, but it doesn't seem to do anything.

I've attached two identical files except for "YES NORMAL" has normalization checked and "NO NORMAL" does not. Both files export mp3s that are much louder (nearing distortion) than wav files or the playback in the app.

I believe Musescore is normalizing both.

In reply to by petercompo1

There should not be distortion unless you have your own computer's sound turned up louder than your speakers can handle. But other people won't have their volume turned up that high. The whole point of normalization is to make things sound, well, normal. So that's how loud audio files are supposed to be, and then you would normally set your own speaker level relative to that.

Anyhow, I can confirm that the option to produce un-normalized audio does not seem to be working currently. Hopefully that's fixed for MuseScore 4. meanwhile, if you have a special need for un-normalized audio, the workaround of editing in a program like Audacity continues to exist.

Well, using volume automation feature of any popular DAW(Reaper, Cakewalk, etc.), you can manipulate(for the second time, easily, and more precisely) the dynamics of your MuseScore-exported Master Audio or Individual Instrument Audio. For example, you can have crescendo effect from measure1 beat3 to measure7 beat2, and a sudden ppp effect on measure7 beat3, and so on. DAW-exported audio would be your finished product.

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