Hi. Nice video thanks. But I was wondering, since the -18dB is a target value aimed at analogue gear, since a daw is fully digital I don t think it is too relevant aiming at -18dB, unless some plugin is mimicking analogue circuitry and the input value should be naturally -18 dB. The DAW itself I d say is blind to this, we can lower or raise values in post and it will not even make a change, including clipping. Thanks :)
Great video! Good information
nice video - good stuff
Thank you for your work. It has been very important. 🇧🇷
Hi. Nice video thanks. But I was wondering, since the -18dB is a target value aimed at analogue gear, since a daw is fully digital I don t think it is too relevant aiming at -18dB, unless some plugin is mimicking analogue circuitry and the input value should be naturally -18 dB. The DAW itself I d say is blind to this, we can lower or raise values in post and it will not even make a change, including clipping. Thanks :)
Very true, in a track in Ableton you can raise the the level as high as you want and it's only the master track clipping that you have to worry about.
I will pay attention to anyone wearing a Clutch shirt.
I need to crank it because otherwise I cant see the waveforms