This is an excellent point! I’d not thought about it like that. Yes I can definitely get the loudness I want within -1.0dBTP so I’ll work to that level to avoid distortion.

Yeah, it’s not so much my fear of poor DACs causing distortion (you’re right - those days are mostly over), it’s when a service transcodes to a lossy format downstream for streaming or download and thus potentially introduces inter-sample overs → distortion.

It obviously really depends on the material too - if a track has just a few peaks that edge close to the target true peak, and there’s a little crunch on the odd peak, that’s less of a problem, but if the entire track is mostly near the target true peak then you can end up with audible distortion throughout if the transcoding pushes the level above 0dBFS. This can be especially noticeable on gentler styles mastered too close to the transcoding “danger zone” within -1.0dBFS (this is a female singer songwriter/guitarist album with cello and backing vocals in places - so it’s smooth and delicate, and revealing!).

It’s mainly that transcoding process that concerns me since it’s out of my hands with bandcamp and there’s little guidance made available for how they turn your uploaded wavs to lossy formats for downloading and streaming.

My worst fear is my beautiful and considered mixes and masters (I did both processes for this project) get crunched hard into 128kbps and end up with horrid distortion from intersample peaks on a fragile and delicate but loud female vocal high point. So I’ll definitely err on the side of “slightly quieter and safer” for this one and guard against distortion, accepting a slight sacrifice in overall dynamic range and absolute loudness.

Great advice and thanks for the input! Happy mastering!

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