Andrew Kolakowski wrote:It's about normalising many files to the same loudness and you don't need any audio guy who charges 1K$ a day for it. It can be normalised to eg. R128 automatically. How will it sound is a different matter - all depends on the original recording. If it was poor it still will be poor and if it was good it still will be good.
Exactly this. Without going into detail, I have a good understanding audio quality. In this case, the quality is what it is. The goal here is to make the relative audio levels between videos equal enough so the viewer doesn't have to adjust the volume level on their remote for each video.
It's probably crap recording, so even audio guy with experience and gear won't make it much better.
Yes, we're talking home video recorded to VHS then converted to digital format. Those old camcorders didn't handle high SPL very well.
I wasn't aware of ffmpeg. That might be just the thing I need.
I also found a utility called MP4 Gain which may also work.