Metallica being Too Loud?

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Has the ritualistic cranking up of the volume of music tracks finally reached a tipping point? Now many of the fans of heavy metal outfit Metallica are complaining that the band's latest effort, Death Magnetic, is too simply loud. And yes, that's a bad thing.

I last wrote about the loudness issue in June 2007, where I outlined the common complaints about audio tracks that have been bothering audiophiles for decades. To recap: The problem stems from pushing the overall audio levels on a track as high as possible. While volume is increased, variation is diminished. This means that while a track is nice and loud, its details are lost. After all, in a digital track, there's only so much room for data in the finite number of bits available on a CD, so something has to go. But no one wants to have a song that's less loud than the next band on the rack... and so the cycle continues.

Now the disappointment has spread into the once-unassailable world of heavy metal, a genre where there's historically been no such thing as too loud. Metallica fans across the web are complaining, loudly, about the levels on Death Magnetic, saying the new album is so loud you "can't hear the details of the music" with one critique saying it is "barely listenable." An online petition has even turned up asking the band to remix the album at a lower overall volume.

In a recent interview with Blender magazine, Metallica drummer Lars Ulrich addressed Web critics by saying that, "... there's nothing up with the sound quality. It's 2008, and that's how we make records. [Producer] Rick Rubin's whole thing is to try and get it to sound lively, to get it to sound loud, to get it to sound exciting, to get it to jump out of the speakers."

He also adds that on the Web, people become more vocal, especially when it comes to negative viewpoints. "The Internet gives everybody a voice, and the Internet has a tendency to give the complainers a louder voice," says Ulrich. "Part of being in Metallica is that there's always somebody who's got a problem with something that you're doing."

The Wall Street Journal has helpfully offered an interactive system where you can see and (more importantly) hear, head to head, what the fuss is all about. Twenty years ago, the music thrashed as furiously as anything and it's so loud I turned down my PC's audio to get it to a comfortable level. Today's track is absurdly loud right from the start, and you can easily hear how mushy the bass and drums sound. They may as well be static.

Despite all of the complaints, Metallica's Death Magnetic currently reigns at the top of The Billboard Charts. But who's to blame for all of the noise? Guns N' Roses, if the Journal is to be believed, was the first to start cranking up the audio, back in 1987. Bands have been on a quest to one-up each other ever since.

Now it seems like we're reaching the limits of big audio, lest every song devolve into a buzzing puddle of gruel. But bands keep trying, mixers push back the best they can... and consumers get caught in the crossfire.
 

Moonlight Drive

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Here's a thought...

Just turn down the volume yourself? Duh.
 

Kaedon

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People are talking about the original mixes being too loud. How they clip in certain places. Its just nit-pikcing. The albums that dont have minor problems like these are few and far between. Its funny that people have said that The Black Album is over produced, and many of these same people are saying this is underproduced. Its complete and utter bullshit.
 

MikeRaw

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No, which is why I never thought you did.
It was obvious to me, by reading it, that you didn't write it. But other people obviously thought you did, so you should've put a link or something, lol, just so the idiots realise it wasn't yours. They probably didn't read it all anyways though, lol.
 

JayScorpion

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i do agree the new album is louder considerin i listened to "all nightmare long" followed by motorhead's "rock out" and motorhead seemed extremely low. some ppl have said that its making the cd sound distorted and ive listened to it alot and i dont get that part. alil too loud yes and maybe thaz the distortion but i wouldnt blatantly call it distorted IMO.:music_band:
 

★Chuck Zombie★

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I can hear the details on the album fine. I have no problem with the levels at all. It just seems that there are more and more people every time Metallica releases something new, that regardless of whether it was good or not, they have to put Metallica down.
 

Kaedon

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I can hear the details on the album fine. I have no problem with the levels at all. It just seems that there are more and more people every time Metallica releases something new, that regardless of whether it was good or not, they have to put Metallica down.
The font in your sig isnt legible. And the color kinda blends in with my background, youre such a sellout!! :clap_1: