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I've noticed recently that on certain tracks, Spotify desktop (Windows) seems to be clipping and distorting audio if its volume control is set too high.
This is extremely noticeable in some songs. Listen to the opening of this track in the Windows desktop client, with your Spotify volume set to 100%:
You'll notice very obvious distortion in the bass notes in the first 10-20 seconds of the song. Even if I turn my system volume way down (but leave Spotify's volume at 100%) so that everthing is very quiet overall, the distortion is still clearly present, which means that it's not a problem with the overall volume, Spotify is introducing it.
I can also see in Windows mixer that the volume peaks up to the max for every one of these bass hits. Lowering Spotify to about 60% volume eliminates the audible distortion, and correspondingly you can see that the peaks are then just below maximum. At this point I can max out my system (Windows) volume and get the music very loud, but without distortion - another indicator that it's Spotify itself which is introducing this clipping.
I do not have the 'Set the same volume level for all songs' setting enabled.
What this means is that Spotify's volume control doesn't just attenuate down from a maximum volume of 0 dBFS (the maximum volume level for a digital audio signal) at 100%, it seems to be actually attempting to amplify the signal, meaning that the waveform ends up clipped if it's already close to or at 0dBFS and therefore cannot be pushed any further.
This seems like a serious oversight for an application whose raison d'être is playing music!
Can someone from Spotify comment on what might be going on here? What is the correct volume to set Spotify at so that the digital signal is being neither attentuated (effectively reducing bit depth), or amplified (potentially introducing clipping), so that I can just control the volume using the Windows system volume instead?
Solved! Go to Solution.
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