A motion picture soundtrack reproduction system has a center front soundtrack channel and a plurality of other soundtrack channels. A volume control adjusts the gain of all the channels. The volume control has a range of settings from a minimum to a maximum, the gain of the center front channel having substantially a first relationship to the volume control settings and the gain of the other channels having substantially a second relationship to the volume control settings, the relationships being such that for a range of volume control settings less than a first setting the gain of the center front channel remains substantially constant while the gain of the other channels decreases as the setting decreases or decreases more gradually than the gain of the other channels as the setting decreases.
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0. 10. An audio system comprising:
a first channel, a gain of the first channel adjustable by a controller;
a second channel, a gain of the second channel adjustable by the controller; and
the controller including:
a volume control having a first range of settings from a minimum to a maximum;
a first output controlling the gain of the first channel in response to a setting of the volume control; and
a second output controlling the gain of the second channel in response to the setting of the volume control,
wherein a decrease in the setting of the volume control both decreases loudness of the system and increases a proportionate contribution of the first channel to the loudness.
0. 14. An audio reproduction system comprising:
a first channel, a gain of the first channel adjustable by a controller;
a second channel, a gain of the second channel adjustable by the controller; and
the controller including:
a volume control having a first range of settings from a minimum to a maximum;
a first output for controlling the gain of the first channel in response to a setting of the volume control; and
a second output for controlling the gain of the second channel in response to the setting of the volume control,
wherein the gain of the second channel decreases more than the gain of the first channel in relationship with a decrease in the setting of the volume control over a second range, the second range being smaller than the first range.
0. 16. An audio system comprising
a first channel and a second channel, each of said channels having a gain; and
a controller having a volume control for adjusting the gain of the first channel and the gain of the second channel, the volume control having a range of settings from a minimum to a maximum, the gain of the first channel having a first relationship to the volume control settings and the gain of the second channel having a second relationship to the volume control settings, the relationships being such that for a range of volume control settings less than a first setting the gain of the first channel (1) remains constant while the gain of the second channel decreases as the volume control setting decreases below said first setting or (2) decreases more gradually than the gain of the second channel as the volume control setting decreases below said first setting.
1. A motion picture soundtrack reproduction system, the system having a center front soundtrack channel and a plurality of other soundtrack channels, comprising:
a controller having a volume control for adjusting the a gain of all the channels for the center front channel and a gain for the plurality of other channels, the volume control having a range of settings from a minimum to a maximum, the controller having a first output for controlling the gain of the center front channel and a second output for controlling the gain of the plurality of other channels in response to settings of the volume control, the gain of the center front channel having a first relationship to the volume control settings and the gain of the plurality of other channels having a second relationship to the volume control settings, the first relationship and the second relationships being such that for a range of volume control settings less than a first setting the gain of the center front channel (1) remains substantially constant while the gain of the plurality of other channels decreases as the a volume control setting decreases below said first setting, or (2) decreases more gradually than the gain of the plurality of other channels as the volume control setting decreases below said first setting.
2. A motion picture soundtrack reproduction system, comprising:
a center front soundtrack channel and a plurality of other soundtrack channels, each of said channels having adjustable gain and feeding one or more loudspeakers, and
a controller having a volume control for adjusting the gain of all the channels a gain for the center front channel and a gain for the plurality of other channels, the volume control having a range of settings from a minimum to a maximum, the controller having a first output for controlling the gain of the center front channel and a second output for controlling the gain of the plurality of other channels in response to settings of the volume control the gain of the center front channel having a first relationship to the volume control settings and the gain of the plurality of other channels having a second relationship to the volume control settings, the first relationship and the second relationships relationship being such that for a range of volume control settings less than a first setting the gain of the center front channel (1) remains substantially constant while the gain of the plurality of other channels decreases as the a volume control setting decreases below said first setting or (2) decreases more gradually than the gain of the plurality of other channels as the volume control setting decreases below said first setting.
3. A system according to
4. A system according to
5. A system according to claim 3 4 wherein for volume control settings less than said second setting the gains of all the channels decrease in substantially the same way gain of the center front channel and the gain for the plurality of other channels are attenuated equally as the volume control setting decreases below said second setting and for such volume control settings the gain of the center front channel is greater than the gain of the plurality of other channels.
6. A system according to
7. A system according to
8. A system according to
0. 11. A system of claim 10 wherein the second output further controls a gain for a third channel in response to the setting of the volume control.
0. 12. A system of claim 10 further comprising at least one loudspeaker.
0. 13. A system of claim 10 further comprising surround outputs.
0. 15. A system of claim 14 wherein the second output further controls a gain for a third channel in response to the setting of the volume control, and the gain of the third channel decreases more than the gain of the first channel in relationship with the decrease in the setting of the volume control over the second range.
0. 17. A system according to claim 16 wherein the range of volume control settings less than said first setting extends down to the minimum control setting.
0. 18. A system according to claim 16 wherein the range of volume control settings less than said first setting extends down to a second setting above the minimum volume control setting.
0. 19. A system according to claim 18 wherein for volume control settings less than said second setting the gains of the first and second channels are attenuated equally as the volume control setting decreases below said second setting and for such volume control settings the gain of the first channel is greater than the gain of the second channel.
0. 20. A system according to claim 19 wherein for volume control settings less than said second setting the gain of the first channel is greater than the gain of the second channel by a constant amount in the logarithmic domain.
0. 21. A system according to claim 16 further comprising left, right and surround outputs.
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The invention relates generally to the processing of audio signals. More particularly, the invention relates to control of the loudness of motion picture soundtracks when reproduced.
In the mid-1970s, Dolby Laboratories introduced a calibration recommendation for monitor levels in movie soundtracks (“Dolby” is a trademark of Dolby Laboratories, Inc.). A pink noise reference signal was used in the record chain to adjust the audio monitor level to 85 dBc. All theatres equipped for playback of the new stereo optical soundtracks were set up such that an equivalent pink noise signal in a soundtrack channel generated the same 85 dBc with the playback volume control (fader) set to the calibrated setting. This meant that theatres playing films at the calibrated volume control setting (a setting of “7” in a range of “0” to “10” on most cinema processors) reproduced the same loudness level selected by the film director and audio engineers in the dubbing theatre (referred to herein as “the mixer”).
This system worked quite well for many years. Dolby Stereo (A-type encoded) films had limited headroom and the resulting constrained dynamic range yielded few audience complaints. Most theatres played films at the calibrated level. Soundtrack format technology has been significantly enhanced since Dolby Stereo. Dolby SR extended the headroom by 3 dB at midrange frequencies, and more at low and high frequencies. In recent years, the new digital formats have further increased the headroom.
Because the 85 dBc calibration technique has been maintained throughout evolving format changes, additional headroom is available on the newer soundtracks. However, feature films do have a consistent, subjective mix reference, independent of increased headroom, for dialogue record level, known as “associative loudness.” When the dubbing mixer sees an actor on the screen, and there is no conflict between the dialogue and music or effects, the dialogue level in a moderate close-up is set to be plausible for the visual impression. Within reasonable limits, this generally holds true to within 2 or 3 dB. This natural dialogue level does not hold true for narration, as there is no corresponding visual reference. Music and effects have no direct visual associative loudness. Most people are not familiar with the actual sound pressure levels of a Concorde takeoff or a 50 mm howitzer. The music score level is equally uncalibrated.
As the headroom capability of the recording medium has been extended, it has certainly been used: the “non-associative” loudness of effects and music has risen to fill the available headroom space. Using dialogue as a reference, loud sounds like explosions are often 20 dB or more louder (explosions reach full scale peak level of 25 dB above dialogue level), and some quiet sounds, which are intended to be heard by all listeners, such as leaves rustling, may be 50 dB quieter.
In response to audience complaints that movies are too loud, many theatres are playing films substantially below the calibrated level. A volume control setting (fader level) of “6” or “5½,” as opposed to the calibrated level (volume control standard setting) of “7,” is not uncommon, representing a loudness reduction of approximately 4 or 6 dB. Some cinemas have their volume control permanently turned down to such settings because projectionists operating multiplexes with many screens showing different movies simultaneously don't have the time or cannot be bothered to set the controls differently for different movies. If the volume control is turned down to avoid complaints of excessive loudness, the dialogue is quieter than the mixer intended, and audiences may complain instead that some dialogue is not intelligible in the presence of other sounds in the film and/or general background noise of the theater (popcorn eating, air-conditioning, people talking, etc.). Theatre playback levels are often set by complaints generated by the loudest (and earliest) element of the show. If the playback level is set in response to the loudest trailer (preview), which is often louder than the feature film, the feature often plays at the same reduced level. The result is that the dialogue level of the feature is lowered by the same level deemed necessary to attenuate the trailer. A feature film played with a loudness 6 dB below the calibrated level may have serious dialogue intelligibility problems and very quiet sounds may become inaudible.
In addition, it is possible that the increased use of headroom from Dolby A-type to Dolby SR and digital releases has not been matched by a corresponding increase in power amplifier and loudspeaker capability. The resultant distortion from overloaded equipment may well exacerbate the loudness problems of recent soundtracks, causing increased incidence of complaints.
In early cinema sound equipment employing calibration, the volume control was a mechanical potentiometer, often with a click-stop or detent at the standard setting. More recent (digital) equipment uses a shaft encoder or a pair of up-down buttons (with a numeric display for the setting), delivering a control signal that operates on multipliers (either digital or voltage-controlled amplifiers) to affect the gain applied to all channels of the reproduced soundtracks. In typical cinema sound equipment, the volume control varies the gain gradually and relatively uniformly over a range of settings from about “4” to “10,” with the gain falling more rapidly at setting below about “4,” allowing a fade to inaudibility. Such a typical prior art relationship between gain or loss and volume control setting is shown in the lower curve of
With the exception of monophonic installations, to which the present invention does not apply, all movie sound installations include three or more front loudspeakers including a center front. Historically, film mixers place dialogue in the center front channel and it is rare for speech from an on-screen actor to be placed anywhere else. This applies both for a multitrack digital soundtrack (for instance 5.1- or 7.1-channels) or a two-channel analog optical soundtrack reproduced via a matrix decoder to derive left, center, right and surround outputs. The center front channel may of course contain other material, but, generally, it is material important in following the action of the movie because the audience's attention is focused on the screen. At moments when the soundtrack is loud enough to provoke complaint, several channels are generally contributing to that loudness, not just any one, and in particular not just the center front.
In accordance with the present invention, a motion picture soundtrack reproduction system comprises a center front soundtrack channel and a plurality of other soundtrack channels. A volume control adjusts the gain of all the channels, the volume control having a range of settings from a minimum to a maximum, the gain of the center front channel having substantially a first relationship to the volume control settings and the gain of the other channels having substantially a second relationship to the volume control settings, the relationships being such that for a range of volume control settings less than a first setting the gain of the center front channel remains substantially constant while the gain of the other channels decreases as the setting decreases or decreases more gradually than the gain of the other channels as the setting decreases.
Also in accordance with the present invention, a motion picture soundtrack reproduction system comprises a center front soundtrack channel and a plurality of other soundtrack channels, each of the channels having adjustable gain and one or more loudspeakers, and a controller having a volume control for adjusting the gain of all the channels, the volume control having a range of settings from a minimum to a maximum, the gain of the center front channel having a first relationship to the volume control settings and the gain of the other channels having a second relationship to the volume control settings, the relationships being such that for a range of volume control settings less than a first setting the gain of the center front channel remains substantially constant while the gain of the other channels decreases as the setting decreases or decreases more gradually than the gain of the other channels as the setting decreases.
The range of volume control settings less than the first setting extends down to the minimum control setting or, alternatively, down to a second setting above the minimum control setting. In the latter case, for settings less than the second setting the gains of all the channels decrease in substantially the same way as the setting decreases and for such volume control settings the gain of the center front channel is greater than the gain of the other channels. Optionally, for settings less than the second setting the gain of the center front channel is greater than the gain of the other channels by a substantially constant amount in the logarithmic domain.
For settings greater than the first setting the gains of all the channels may increase as the setting increases and for each of such volume control settings the gain of the center front channel and the gain of the other channels may be substantially the same.
The invention is particularly advantageous in an arrangement in which when the volume control is set to a standard setting, each of the channels has a respective gain that produces a respective standard acoustic level in response to a signal having a respective standard reference level in the channel. In that case, the first setting is about the standard setting.
The invention provides for reducing the maximum loudness, and thereby avoiding complaints, while maintaining the acoustic level of the center front containing dialogue and requiring only one user-operated control. According to an embodiment of the invention, the cinema equipment is designed and installed in the conventional manner to the extent that with the volume control nominally at its standard setting, each of the reproduced soundtrack channels has a respective gain that produces a respective standard acoustic level in response to a signal having a respective standard reference level in the channel, thus matching the standard levels in a film mixing room. Thus, when calibrated, the playback system with its volume control at the standard setting has an apparent loudness that is substantially the same as that intended by the film mixer. However, in accordance with the present invention, if the volume control is turned down below the standard setting in response to actual (or expected) complaints from the audience, over a limited range of settings all channels except the center front are attenuated equally, but the center front is reduced by a smaller degree (or not at all). The effect is not only a reduction in the overall loudness but an increase in the proportionate contribution of the center front channel, with a potential improvement in intelligibility when the other channels are loud. Optionally, after some degree of changing the balance of the center front to other channels down to a setting below the standard setting, for further lowering of the settings all channels are attenuated equally, maintaining fixed the altered balance.
Still referring to
An exemplary system according to the present invention is shown in
In a practical arrangement employing digital controls, as shown in
The present invention and its various aspects may be implemented in analog circuitry, for example, with two suitable non-linear functions relating control setting to gain, or as software functions performed in digital signal processors, programmed general-purpose digital computers, and/or special purpose digital computers, or some combination of such devices and functions. Interfaces between analog and digital signal streams may be performed in appropriate hardware and/or as functions in software and/or firmware.
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