What are you using (Windows, macOS, Linux)? What audio formats do you need to process (MP3, WAV, FLAC)?
Offers a free version of Sound Normalizer 8.7 for Windows.
The software includes a full-featured that allows you to modify audio file metadata directly. You can:
The software included an editor for ID3 tags (both v1 and v2 standards), which allowed users to organize artist names, titles, and cover art directly within the app.
MP3Gain was the original solution for this problem. Unlike Sound Normalizer, MP3Gain primarily uses statistical analysis to determine how loud a file sounds to the human ear (perceived loudness), rather than just looking at the peak volume. It is completely free and open-source, though it is primarily limited to the MP3 format.
⚠️ MP3Gain works only on MP3, not WAV/FLAC.
What are you using (Windows, macOS, Linux)? What audio formats do you need to process (MP3, WAV, FLAC)?
Offers a free version of Sound Normalizer 8.7 for Windows.
The software includes a full-featured that allows you to modify audio file metadata directly. You can:
The software included an editor for ID3 tags (both v1 and v2 standards), which allowed users to organize artist names, titles, and cover art directly within the app.
MP3Gain was the original solution for this problem. Unlike Sound Normalizer, MP3Gain primarily uses statistical analysis to determine how loud a file sounds to the human ear (perceived loudness), rather than just looking at the peak volume. It is completely free and open-source, though it is primarily limited to the MP3 format.
⚠️ MP3Gain works only on MP3, not WAV/FLAC.