M4A to WAV Bass Boost: Add Vocal Warmth to Recordings

Boost the bass of M4A Voice Memos and recordings, then convert to uncompressed WAV. Restore the natural warmth that iPhone microphones miss, ready for editing in any DAW.

Convert M4A to WAV

Upload your file and adjust bass boost level

M4A WAV

Tap to choose your file

or

Supports M4A, WAV, FLAC, OGG, AAC, WMA, AIFF, OPUS • Max 100 MB

Encrypted upload via HTTPS. Files auto-deleted within 2 hours.

How Bass Boost Works

Bass boost applies a low-shelf EQ filter centered at 100 Hz. Everything below this frequency gets amplified by your chosen amount — frequencies above remain untouched. This is the same type of filter as the “bass” knob on a stereo or car audio system.

Because boosting bass adds energy to the signal, loud passages can exceed the digital ceiling and clip. Convertio automatically applies a brick-wall limiter after the bass filter to prevent distortion while preserving dynamics.

The processing chain: your audio → bass shelf filter (100 Hz, +X dB) → limiter (ceiling at −0.5 dBFS) → WAV encoding. The uncompressed WAV output preserves the bass enhancement perfectly without any lossy compression artifacts.

Bass Boost Settings Guide

Level Gain Best For
Off0 dBOriginal audio, no enhancement
Subtle+3 dBGentle warmth for headphone listening
Moderate+6 dBGood for earbuds and laptop speakers
Strong+10 dBCar audio, gym playlists, Bluetooth speakers
Heavy+15 dBPowerful bass for EDM, hip-hop, trap
Extreme+20 dBMaximum impact, meme-level bass, subwoofer testing

M4A Bass Boost: Vocal Warmth for Voice Recordings

M4A files from iPhone Voice Memos consistently lack low-end warmth because the microphone hardware prioritizes intelligibility over fullness. The tiny MEMS microphone capsules in iPhones are physically optimized for the 1–4 kHz speech clarity range — the fundamental frequency of human voice (85–255 Hz) is partially attenuated.

For podcasters recording field interviews on iPhone, a +3 to +6 dB bass boost restores the natural chest resonance and warmth that a studio microphone would capture. Male voices benefit most from boosting around 100–150 Hz (fundamental frequency range), while female voices respond well to 150–200 Hz enhancement.

The WAV output is ready for immediate import into GarageBand, Logic Pro, Audacity, or any DAW. The bass enhancement is baked in, so no additional EQ processing is needed during editing — though you can refine further if desired.

For Voice Memos: +3 dB adds subtle warmth, +6 dB gives a noticeable “studio mic” quality. Keep boost moderate for speech — excessive bass causes muddiness in voice recordings.

Ready to Convert?

Add bass boost and convert M4A to WAV

M4A WAV

Tap to choose your file

or

Supports M4A, WAV, FLAC, OGG, AAC, WMA, AIFF, OPUS • Max 100 MB

Frequently Asked Questions

iPhone microphones are optimized for speech clarity (1–4 kHz), not bass. Low frequencies below 200 Hz are naturally attenuated by the small MEMS mic capsules. A +3 to +6 dB boost restores the natural warmth that larger microphones would capture.

+3 to +6 dB for natural warmth. Male voices benefit from boosting around 100–150 Hz, female voices around 150–200 Hz. Start at +3 dB and increase to taste.

Not at moderate levels. The 100 Hz center frequency targets the warmth range below speech intelligibility frequencies. The limiter prevents distortion. Keep boost at +3 to +6 dB for speech to maintain clarity.

Yes. Adding +3 to +6 dB of bass warmth to iPhone recordings before editing in a DAW creates a richer, more professional sound. The WAV output imports directly into GarageBand, Logic Pro, Audacity, or Pro Tools.

WAV is uncompressed — the bass-enhanced audio is preserved perfectly without lossy encoding artifacts. It's the standard format for DAW editing. If you need a smaller file for sharing, convert the enhanced WAV to MP3 as a separate step.

More M4A to WAV Guides

M4A to WAV Quality Settings: Sample Rate, Bit Depth & Channels
Choose the right WAV settings for iTunes songs, Voice Memos, and other M4A files.
Normalize M4A to WAV Loudness for Consistent Playback
Even out volume differences between Voice Memos, iTunes songs, and other M4A files when converting to WAV.
M4A to WAV Speed Changer: Adjust Voice Memo Tempo
Slow down Voice Memos for transcription or speed up interviews. Uncompressed WAV for DAW editing.
M4A to WAV Volume Boost: Amplify Voice Memos for Editing
Boost quiet iPhone recordings by +3 to +20 dB and convert to WAV for editing and transcription.
M4A to WAV Fade In/Out: Smooth Transitions for Voice Memos
Add fade in and fade out to M4A files. Remove pickup noise and smooth endings when converting to WAV.
M4A to WAV: When to Convert Apple Audio to Uncompressed
When converting M4A to WAV makes sense: DAW editing, CD burning, hardware compatibility. When it doesn't help.
Back to M4A to WAV Converter