"some recordings are anomalous; such as "Like a Virgin" in 192k". What's an anomalous recording? And if LAV was DDD then it was done as 16 bit presumably? Then transferred to tape? Is this what you mean by that?
--
August
Bleed, Inc.
Selling Art Is Tying Your Ego To a Leash And Walking It Like a Dog
-- On Mon, Jun 3, 2013 at 3:43 AM, Lokkerman <phil.steeples@gmail.com> wrote:
I've been away so not been in this discussion. I've always found that on genuine studio masters, transferred form my own reel to reel tapes that the bass is much richer with 192. Certainly more bits means more realism.I'm never quite certain about HDtracks; get yourself a copy of this: http://www.sonicvisualiser.org/ it's free but it's great to compare sources. Lots of King Crimson stuff are 48k; some recordings are anomalous; such as "Like a Virgin" in 192k. This was one of the first true digital DDD recordings (Google it), we could do with a library that shows a sonic visualiser window for each recording.
--On Thu, May 30, 2013 at 2:15 PM, Riky <rjdodani@gmail.com> wrote:
100% agree w/highlander :)--On Sun, May 26, 2013 at 8:00 PM, RW <rlwainwright@gmail.com> wrote:
I totally agree with Highlander, I hear more improvement from the additional bit depth than I do from higher sampling rates. And I have found 24bit/48k to sound very, very good when properly done...
-RW-
On Saturday, May 25, 2013 6:20:49 PM UTC-4, Highlander wrote:My personal stance on this issue is that 16bit to 24bit has more of a noticeable improvement than the high sampling rates, like 192k. I don't mind HDtracks 24-96k downloads though, if the recordings are properly remastered. But, many of their offerings are questionable. In the end, I think 24-96k is fine for most acoustic music, like jazz, folk and classical. But, for many rock or popular music recordings, I think 24-48k works very well and sounds really good to my ears. Regarding file space, roughly speaking, a thirty minute 24-192k file we be slightly over a gig...where as a thirty minute 24-48k file will be around 350MB. With all this said though, I think capturing music and working on it in the digital domain, with high sampling rates, is generally a good idea. I just think offering 192k stereo recordings is overkill for most listeners and is a way to charge more money. I say all this listening on Krell amps with Thiel speakers, along with AKG headphones. In the end, all that matters is what we personally like to our ears at any given moment.--
On Saturday, May 25, 2013 12:22:32 PM UTC-4, Dale wrote:This should get the conversations flowing again! Although I know this territory was covered recently, this article may not have been read by some.
http://xiph.org/~xiphmont/demo/neil-young.html
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August
Bleed, Inc.
Selling Art Is Tying Your Ego To a Leash And Walking It Like a Dog
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