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This is why man invented computers and CD burners. Rip the CD onto your computer, load up some editing software to adjust the volume on each song, then burn the new & improved copy onto a CDR.Or going the other way, I'll run some mild to moderate compression on certain albums so I can listen to them in my car without having all the quiet parts getting drowned out. The computer, it's a wonderful tool.
If I am reading this right, I think DOS is not talking about compression\limiting but that recorded volume levels are not correlated to reality. Meaning, the average SPL of a soft ballad w\singer and guitar must be quieter than a full band with electric guitar, bass and drums. I think this has always been normal recording practice even before the more recent trend of brickwall limiting; you record as hot as you can to maximize signal to noise ratio and then adjust levels in the mix. Outside of classical I am not sure if this sort of dynamics-calibrated-to-the-real-world type of thing is ever really practiced. Certainly the end user's volume control would have to come into play.
Completely purist, uncompressed recordings are indeed very cool, but the fact is that in order to hear a satisfying low-level crooner level you are going to have to listen at a level which blow the walls down when the full band kicks in. I know lots of you guys CAN do this, and you should all be extremely extremely grateful for that fact!