mp3gain.exe version 1.5.1 copyright(c) 2001-2009 by Glen Sawyer uses mpglib, which can be found at http://www.mpg123.de Usage: mp3gain.exe [options] [ ...] options: /v - show version number /g - apply gain i without doing any analysis /l 0 - apply gain i to channel 0 (left channel) without doing any analysis (ONLY works for STEREO files, not Joint Stereo) /l 1 - apply gain i to channel 1 (right channel) /r - apply Track gain automatically (all files set to equal loudness) /k - automatically lower Track/Album gain to not clip audio /a - apply Album gain automatically (files are all from the same album: a single gain change is applied to all files, so their loudness relative to each other remains unchanged, but the average album loudness is normalized) /m - modify suggested MP3 gain by integer i /d - modify suggested dB gain by floating-point n /c - ignore clipping warning when applying gain /o - output is a database-friendly tab-delimited list /t - writes modified data to temp file, then deletes original instead of modifying bytes in original file /q - Quiet mode: no status messages /p - Preserve original file timestamp /x - Only find max. amplitude of file /f - Assume input file is an MPEG 2 Layer III file (i.e. don't check for mis-named Layer I or Layer II files) /? or /h - show this message /s c - only check stored tag info (no other processing) /s d - delete stored tag info (no other processing) /s s - skip (ignore) stored tag info (do not read or write tags) /s r - force re-calculation (do not read tag info) /s i - use ID3v2 tag for MP3 gain info /s a - use APE tag for MP3 gain info (default) /u - undo changes made (based on stored tag info) /w - "wrap" gain change if gain+change > 255 or gain+change < 0 (use "/? wrap" switch for a complete explanation) If you specify /r and /a, only the second one will work If you do not specify /c, the program will stop and ask before applying gain change to a file that might clip