Quote:
Bss AGC ON ?
No, I never used the Bass AGC, although from what I remember experimenting with it last night, voices still got suppressed / bassified... I'll test more later today.
Edit: The NoAGC preset is showing a significant drop in RMS and increase in DR (2-2.5 dB, based on some initial testing) on many tracks. Voices are no longer squashed as much, so oddly enough the track being discussed here (The Pretender) is showing an increase in RMS and a drop in DR, probably due to the uncoiling of the midrange, and so I'm going to have to redo the preset based on not using the AGC.
With respect to having it all wrong for desiring lower RMS values in the mix, it's interesting that Alan Parsons, an often-lauded industry mixing and mastering specialist, who did the mastering for Pink Floyd's "The Dark Side of the Moon", is not fond of making mixes with higher RMS levels.
It is also of interest that Ian Shepherd, another mastering engineer, was able to convince Bob Katz, another mastering engineer with a published book and a few Grammy awards, that the TT offline meter does indicate DR satisfactorily.
I also think at issue here is the peak vs. RMS nature of multiband, and the lack of the ability to control the degree of compression or limiting on a per-band basis.