EQ Profile Associated To Albums

Feature description:

To assoiciate EQ profiles to albums.

Problem solved:

Some of those albums from the 80’s and prior need that gentle gain and bass boost, but I don’t want that set globally when some 2025 club banger blows out my speakers LOL.

Brought benefits:

per album EQ profile

Other application solutions:

 

 

Additional description and context:

 

 

Screenshots / Mockup:

    

The problem is how to deal with also multiple profiles per headphones / output devices.

Hi @Tolriq,

This is true, but I would claim it is more important for the albums to have EQ profiles attached to them as they are changing more than the audio hardware being used. Also most people use the same 1 or 2 systems for all their music listening. 90% of my listening is in the car for example, but having to change the EQ for every album is a chore and sometimes I forget.

Would be amazing to have per album EQ profiles :slight_smile:

Yes but EQ profiles embed the AutoEQ stuff and they auto load on device change.

This creates a lot of mess and edge cases for this.

I see your point, but even still… the AutoEQ is embedded as one of the many objects available in the “Equalizer * DSP” options.

I was hoping for an option just to associate different EQ Profiles with albums so this way the album can load the EQ profile (which “AutoEQ” is part of and can be left disabled or enabled according to the profile setup).

I hope I am making sense :grinning_face:

One way to deal with this problem is by only allowing one of the EQs.

So there would be a toggle in settings, to switch between the existing AutoEQ and AlbumAutoEQ (same functionality, but for albums). This way users can decide which one is more important for them and you don’t have to deal with edge cases.

1 Like

@z3r1nd I can see that for sure, or possibly 2 EQ modules, one for global, and one for album EQ which overrides global?

I would pay good money for this feature, and even more per track (as I sometimes put bonus tracks from remasters on Disc #2 - for instance Duran Duran’s Rio from 1982, the main album is Disc #1 as it has the best audio quality, but the 2009 loud remasters have some bonus tracks not previously available, so I put them on Disc #2 but within the same album for organization.)