Adaptive volume also seems to be effected by other files in the playlist:
- File 1 has a peak volume R128 level of -3.0. When played by itself, adaptive volume adds a fixed boost of +2.0db.
- File 2 has a peak volume R128 level of -2.0. When played by itself, adaptive volume adds a fixed boost of +1.0db.
When both files are on the Playing Now list, playing File 1 now has a fixed boost of +1.0db, but when it was played by itself it had a boost of +2.0db. I thought balancing volume levels across a playlist was the responsibility of the Volume Leveling feature? I do not have the Volume Leveling feature enabled.
EDIT: I re-read Matt's original post and now I see this is intended behavior. My question is, why? In my opinion this should only be the behavior if Volume Leveling is enabled. If Volume Leveling is not enabled, then Adaptive Volume should boost on a per-file basis regardless of what other files are in the playlist. Adjusting on a per-playlist and not a per-track basis seems to totally defeat the point of this plugin...imagine having two files on the playlist, one of which is very loud and the other is very quiet. I'd expect a feature called "adaptive volume" to make the quiet file much louder. Which it would, when played by itself. But due to current design which considers the peak volume at the playlist level, when played in such a playlist the quiet file will receive hardly any boost at all. This seems completely counter-intuitive to the description of "Peak level normalize" given in the plugin which makes no references at all to peak playlist levels.
EDIT 2: I see Matt's response to this in a previous post:
He could always play one track at a time
Seems a rather poor solution... A much better solution, like I mentioned before, would be to make adaptive volume work on a per-file basis when used alone and only consider peak playlist level when enabled in conjunction with volume leveling.
EDIT 3: I think I understand now why this was designed the way it was. It was designed with only music album playlists in mind. So the current behavior does make some sense because it preserves the (often artistically intentional) dynamics in transition from one track to the next. But this ONLY applies to music albums. For other types of playlists such as mixed music playlists or video playlists there is no intentional transition to preserve so the way the plugin is designed makes much less (none, really) sense.