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Audio Normalization: What Is It And Should I Care?


Ken Theriot Last updated on July 16, 2017

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If you’ve heard the term “audio normalization,” or just anything like “you
should normalize your audio?” you may well wonder “what the heck does
that mean? Isn’t my audio normal? Do I have abnormal audio?” And you
would be right to wonder that. Because the term is not really very self-
explanatory. So what else is new in the audio recording world?

To answer the questions in the title – let’s take them one at a time, but in
reverse order, because it’s easier that way:).

Should I Care What Audio Normalization Is?


Yes.

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That was easy. Next.

What Is Audio Normalization?


You COULD just use the de nition from Wikipedia here. But good luck with that. As is typical with audio terminology, that
de nition is super confusing.

It’s actually pretty easy to understand and not really that easy to put into words. But I’ll try. When you “normalize” an audio
waveform (the blobs and squiggles), you are simply turning up the volume. Honestly, that’s really it. The only question is “how
much does it get turned up?”

The answer to THAT takes just a little tiny bit of explaining. First, let’s recall that with digital audio, there is a maximum
volume level. If the audio is somehow pushed beyond that boundary, the audio gets really ugly because it distorts/clips.

Some Ways That Digital Audio Is Weird


This maximum volume level I mentioned is at 0 decibels (abbreviated as “dB”), by the way. Digital audio is upside down. Zero is
the maximum. Average levels for music are usually between around -13 decibels to -20 decibels, or “dB” for short. Really quiet
levels are down at like -70 dB. As the audio gets quieter, it sinks deeper into the negative numbers.

Yeah, digital audio is weird. But as long as you buy into the fact that 0 dB is the loudest the audio can gt before clipping
(distorting), you’ll know all you need to know.

So Ways All Audio Is Weird


In case you didn’t know this, sound/audio is caused by waves in the air. Those waves cause air molecules to vibrate back and
forth. The way a microphone is able to pick up audio is that those “air waves” ripple across the surface of a at thing inside the

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mic. That causes the at thing to move back and forth (in the case of a dynamic mic) or to cause back-and-forth electrical
pressure in the case of a condenser mic. For more detail on this, check out my post What Is the Difference Between
Condenser and Dynamic Microphones?

So What Is The Weird Part?


Audio waves show up in audio software in a weird sort of way. For instance,
you might expect the quietest audio to be at the bottom and the loudest to be Figure 1.

at the top. But that isn’t the way it works with audio.

Because of the fact that audio comes from waves – the back-and-forth motion of air molecules – the loudest parts of audio are
shown at the top AND bottom, and absolute silence is in the middle. Since pictures make things easier, see Figure 1.

So rather than thinking of the maximum allowable volume level as a “ceiling,” which is what I was going to do, let’s think of it
like a swim lane. And in this swim lane, BOTH edges are boundaries not to be crossed.

This also means that when looking for the loudest part of your audio, you have to look both up AND down. Admit it. That’s a
little weird. As it happens, the loudest part of the audio in our example below is in the bottom part of the audio.

Normalization Math
OK, back to normalization. Let’s get back the the question of how much audio is turned up when it’s being normalized. The
normalization effect in audio software will nd whatever the loudest point in your recorded audio is. Once it knows the
loudest bit of audio, it will turn that up to JUST under 0 dB (you can set this in the Normalize controls to be AT 0 dB or
whatever level if you want). So the loudest part of your audio gets turned up to as loud as it can be before clipping.

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Let’s say the loudest part of your audio, which is a vocal recording in our
Figure 2. example, is a part where you shout something. See Figure 2 for an example.

And let’s say that shout is measured at -6 dB. The normalization effect will do some math here.

It wants to turn up that shouted audio to 0 dB. So it needs to know the difference between how loud the shout is, and the
loudest it could possibly be before distorting.

The simple math (well, that is if negative numbers didn’t freak you out too much) is that 0 minus -6 equals 6. So the difference
is 6 dB.

Now that the software knows to turn up the loudest part of the audio by 6 dB, it then turns EVERYTHING up by that same
amount.

Let’s look at a “before” picture of our example audio.

Before Normalzing

And here is what it looks like AFTER normalization.

That’s It?
Yeah. That’s it. Remember I said that audio normalization was really just turning it up? I know it took a fair amount of
explaining, but yeah. The only reason to normalize your audio is to make sure that it is loud enough to be heard. That could be

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for whatever reason you want.

Use With Caution


As I have preached again and again, noise is the enemy of good audio. Before you even normalize your audio, you’ll want to be
sure you’ve gotten rid of (or prevented) as much noise as possible from being in your audio recording. See my post series on
how to do that here: Improve The Quality Of The Audio You Record At Home.

The reason it’s so important is that by normalizing your audio, you are turning it up, as we have seen. But any noise that is
present in your recording will ALSO get turned up by the same amount. So be very careful of that when using this tool. Audio
normalization is powerful, and so can also be dangerous.

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