The story so far. On Debian unstable.
Easymp3gain was removed from Debian unstable. Settling in on
alternatives before I remove it from my system.
Not completely against using the different *gain tools from the command
line, but would prefer GUI.
Tried QTGain https://sourceforge.net/projects/qtgain/
Apparently from the change log it had more of an interface, but went
back to minimal with the port to QT5.
Initially had a not previously gained mp3 file to test. After letting
QTGain do it's thing, something seemed a little odd when looking with
easymp3gain, the replaygain tool in Soundkonverter, and Musicbrainz
Picard to see what replaygain information they showed.
After adding, removing, adding, removing with no issues, went back to
QTGain a second time and after using QTGain the second time, Easymp3gain
showed the volume at 89, instead of volume '92' and track tag '-3'.
So QTGain is out.
Generally speaking I'm leaning toward using the replaygain tool in
Soundkonverter, looked good from my initial testing with mp3, ripped 3
CDs and used it for them so it looks good with vorbis audio.
Where the glitch comes in is with m4a files. The replay gain tool just
shows question marks in the track and album gain fields. Tried checking
the box to force recalculation then clicked the 'Tag Untagged' button,
looked like it was behaving correctly and doing the
calculation/recalculation, still shows question marks. Easymp3gain shows
the gain has been set.
Next found a different album of m4a files, loaded them in Easymp3gain to
verify the tags were there, loaded them in the replaygain tool and again
it just showed question marks.
I did also post a message in the KDE forum asking if anybody else has
seen this behavior
https://forum.kde.org/viewtopic.php?f=19&t=136507
As I write this there were 6 views, no replies.
Same question here, anybody else seeing this behavior?
Later, Seeker