Hi,
I did a search in this forum for the word "Loudness" and came up with zero.
It would be great to see a variable Fletcher-Munson Loudness Control / Plugin for MC14.
Does anyone remember this? It’s not even that “old”? I’m only 35!
In my opinion, this is a major and wonderful function for home audio music playback that existed on almost all decent stereo sets for about 40 years (?) and has mysteriously disappeared from the front panels, manuals and "general knowledge" it seems.
To be clear, this is a function separate from Volume ... although dependant on Volume. This also is not to be confused with “loudness” achieved through compression, multi-band or otherwise.
It is a volume-affected, variable compensation for the Fletcher–Munson Loudness Curve - in short that human hearing has different frequency responses at different SPL(s).
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fletcher%E2%80%93Munson_curvesIn practical application, there used to be a switch on stereos that would say "Loudness" and the circuit, when engaged, would overlay a compensating (opposite) curve - in step with the Volume setting and the amount of Fletcher-Munson effect at that volume level.
On more sophisticated sets, there used to be a Variable Loudness control – with a “default” position marked, but allowing the user to “dial in” the amount of compensation.
I’m not sure how these ubiquitous circuits knew the actual SPL in the room (they couldn’t have), but there must have been some brackets established arbitrarily, based on typical consumer loudspeaker sensitivities etc. And the Variable Loudness made it possible to be more accurate, I guess. Maybe it's simpler.
Indeed, some MC14 users might be piping their soundcard’s analog output through an integrated amp or receiver that has a Loudness control. However, in the last 15-17 years or so, across all the major brands, the function seems to have disappeared, and it would be great to enforce it right in MC14, to taste (variable).
Many users surely run straight into amplified speakers, or a pure amp, too.
There may be some controversy over whether this is relevant given today’s technologies – and there may be something I’m missing here about why “Loudness” has disappeared.
That aside, it was always a great, quick way to bring fullness, clarity and more fun
to tons of recorded music and playback environments. Objective or Subjective ... it was a fun and effective tool!
Enough promoting now ... anyone want to pick up this idea? I’m no programmer.