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The Foo Fighters just proved me right about loudness – and dynamics

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Foo Fighters just released a surprise new single, “Run” – and the biggest surprise to me is that it has great dynamics.

All their recent releases have been pushed really hard, in the loudness department – not disastrously, but I’ve always thought they would have sounded better with more room to breathe.

This single proves me right.

But then, I would say that ! I’m always saying that balanced dynamics beat loudness.

So in this post, I’m not going to offer any personal opinions at all, I’m just going to let the facts speak for themselves – and the reviews.

Reviews like this one, in Billboard:

Foo Fighters Crank Up the Heavy… play[ing] with a soft-loud-soft dynamic on the new single “Run,” which opens as a dreamy, slow burner then, as you’d expect with the Foos, quickly turns heavy as thunder. How heavy? So heavy your mom will hate it and your neighbors will tell you to turn it down. So heavy it might just feature some of the most hulking moments in the Foos’ canon

Or this one, in Blabbermouth:

a monolithic song of the summer shoo-in as melodic as it is monstrously heavy

– and these comments are about a song that is 4dB quieter than their 2011 single “Rope” !

So how does this compute ?

How can it be a “a full-bore riff-rocker with a huge, triumphant chorus” (Stereogum) with “the speakers going to 11” (SPIN) when it’s mixed and mastered at a lower level than their earlier releases ?

How can it be quieter but sound louder ?

Because dynamics.

And because loudness management.

This song sounds just as loud as “Rope” on YouTube, TIDAL and Spotify. But “Run” has 4 dB more peak-to-loudness impact than “Rope”, as my Dynameter plugin clearly shows – and the Foos have made it count:

QED

Don’t trust the reviews, though – listen for yourself. Listen to the way the guitars pile in during the chorus, the pounding drums – this song still sounds exactly like a Foo Fighters record should, proving yet again that “loudness” isn’t a requirement of “the sound”, it’s just an increasingly irrelevant technicality.

The Foo Fighters have seized the opportunity of using more dynamics in their music, and it’s worked.

Maybe you should, too.

 
 

The Foo Fighters just proved me right about loudness – and dynamics is a post from Ian Shepherd's: Production Advice

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