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Ever wonder why older albums feel warm and dynamic while some late-’90s and 2000s records sound like a stark wall of noise?
In this episode of Tape Spaghetti, Scott and Blake remember the Loudness Wars—an era when mastering engineers pushed music to its absolute sonic limits.
The guys track the constraints of analog vinyl to the digital “look-ahead” limiters that could mathematically crush peaks into flat lines.
From Bob Ludwig's legendary Led Zeppelin II pressing to Steely Dan, Dire Straits, Oasis, the Red Hot Chili Peppers, Rick Rubin’s hit factory, and Metallica’s infamous Death Magnetic, the guys explore how "LOUDER" became "better"...until it wasn’t.
They break down dynamic range, digital clipping, the Waves L1 Limiter, ear fatigue, and why volume almost always wins in short bursts – but loses out over the course of a full album.
The good news? Streaming normalization may have quietly reset the dynamics playing field.
Dive into this under-reported part of music history, go down the gear-nerd rabbit hole, and pick apart the cultural impact of volume ruling everything.
You may never hear your favorite records the same way again.
By Blake Wyland & Scott Marquart4.8
2525 ratings
Ever wonder why older albums feel warm and dynamic while some late-’90s and 2000s records sound like a stark wall of noise?
In this episode of Tape Spaghetti, Scott and Blake remember the Loudness Wars—an era when mastering engineers pushed music to its absolute sonic limits.
The guys track the constraints of analog vinyl to the digital “look-ahead” limiters that could mathematically crush peaks into flat lines.
From Bob Ludwig's legendary Led Zeppelin II pressing to Steely Dan, Dire Straits, Oasis, the Red Hot Chili Peppers, Rick Rubin’s hit factory, and Metallica’s infamous Death Magnetic, the guys explore how "LOUDER" became "better"...until it wasn’t.
They break down dynamic range, digital clipping, the Waves L1 Limiter, ear fatigue, and why volume almost always wins in short bursts – but loses out over the course of a full album.
The good news? Streaming normalization may have quietly reset the dynamics playing field.
Dive into this under-reported part of music history, go down the gear-nerd rabbit hole, and pick apart the cultural impact of volume ruling everything.
You may never hear your favorite records the same way again.

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