{"id":76,"date":"2020-05-07T13:34:51","date_gmt":"2020-05-07T13:34:51","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.gordonssummerconcerts.com\/?p=76"},"modified":"2020-06-19T13:52:27","modified_gmt":"2020-06-19T13:52:27","slug":"why-is-music-always-louder-than-dialogue-on-tv","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"http:\/\/www.gordonssummerconcerts.com\/sound-quality\/why-is-music-always-louder-than-dialogue-on-tv\/","title":{"rendered":"Why Is Music Always Louder Than Dialogue On TV?"},"content":{"rendered":"

Movies happen to be mixed along this way, with high dynamic range (HDR) sound, to sound great in a theater.<\/p>\n

It’s a pleasant calm ambience with better than average acoustics. High dynamic range sounds great in a theater, where you can hear murmur calm exchange no issue since the noise level is so low and there’s not a ton of reverberations in the room.<\/p>\n

All things considered music always louder than dialogue on TV, and sound energizing. Much the same as how the filmmakers endorsed it and needed you to hear it.<\/p>\n

In any case, at home, you’re challenging with your window air conditioner, or a fan, or an open window, or others talking in a nearby room.<\/p>\n

It’s much more noise to contend with. You most likely likewise have awful acoustics in your playback space with bunches of reflections off hard surfaces and minimal sound proofing in the dividers to stop acoustical energy move.<\/p>\n

So you turn up your film so you can minimize sound effects louder than dialogue.<\/p>\n

\"tv-with-speakers\"<\/p>\n

Cost in production<\/h2>\n

It would cost the studio and\/or distributor more money to make an altogether isolated low dynamic range (LDR) audio mix. It’s additional time paying for a re-recording mixer, a mix stage, and filmmakers to arrive in an endorse a new, separate mix.<\/p>\n

Cost in plate space and bandwidth<\/h2>\n

Going off of cost, it additionally costs more money for everybody giving the content (distributors, studios, iTunes, Netflix, Amazon) to give additional streaming bandwidth to another audio stream.<\/p>\n

The studios\/distributors additionally have a constrained measure of space on their Blu-ray, DVD, and UHD plates.<\/p>\n

They invest a ton of energy attempting to appropriately distribute that space just with the fundamental audio mix, menus, video stream, and bonus content. Few would need to surrender plate space for another LDR audio mix.<\/p>\n

Cost in consumer electronics with constant compressors<\/h2>\n

This is a mainstream “solution” to this high dynamic range (HDR) issue. Simply get an amplifier\/new receiver\/TV with a “night mode” incorporated with it, with real-time audio compressors rushing to crush down the HDR audio into LDR audio.<\/p>\n

A couple of issues are:<\/p>\n