Columns Retired Columns & Blogs |
Can select which songs you want instead of bying the whole CD
Digital copies of music in the MP3 format are all the rage. Have you heard an MP3 on a good audio system?
I spend far too much time not listening to my favorite music. When I actually get a chance to sit down away from this damned computer, I want to hear what I enjoyand that still keeps bringing me all the way back to the good old LP! Some of my CDs are enjoyable, but they just can't compete with the old (or even the new) vinyl. Anyhow, I spend too much time, 12-18 hours a day, at the computer. Just the thought of more digitization is too much for me. I don't want to hear computer music in a serious listening environment. Bad enough that I have to work with it (read Escient and Arrakis). By the way, sorry to hear of Audio mag's folding; they were one of my early inspirations.
Great for listening to disc samples, beats tapes for car use (if we can just get a good car reader), while reducing disc shuffling. BUT it is not HI-FI. I will keep listening to real sources on my system when I really want to enjoy music.
With the soon-to-be-available SACD or equivalent, why should I want a medium that is "near-CD" quality at all? Besides, I am a die-hard radio fan. I listen mostly to fine FM, but also play around with AM stereo. The AMAX idea is really pretty goodabout like MP3!
Last year I went through the process of taking about a dozen MP3s I had, converting them to .wav files (a non-lossy process), and burning the songs onto a CD-ROM. I did a few comparisons between the original material and the MP3'd material, and there was an enormous difference. The overall sound was very digitized; the frequency range was squashed, and seemed somehow robbed of all emotional content. It also paled in comparison to my Sony JB920 MiniDisc recorder, whose ATRAC 4.0 compression algorithm puts MP3 to shame.
In my opinion, lossy data-reduction schemes are inherently flawed. As long as my CD player struggles to compete with my LP player in such important areas as resolution, high-frequency detail, dynamics, purity of tone, etc.in short, the ability to communicate the music's inner soulI see no point in trying out a format that, by any standard, is less than that (for serious listening that is).
I have a good friend who is an engineer for Intel who did some serious analysis and experiments with Mp3 decoders. He used several formats and converted a number of music pieces from each format to mp3 and then burned a cd that had the mp3 tracks, the same tracks from the original cd in "red book" format, a set of tracks that alternated seamlessly between the mp3 and cd formats at various time intervals, and then perhaps most interesting, he developed the algorithm to subract the mp3 tracks from the original "red book" tracts so once could hear exactly what each mp3 decoder stripped out. Conclusions: Different mp3 decoders sound quite different and throw out different information sets in their compression algorithms than others - this is easily audible on the difference tracks. The best mp3 stuff was listenable - say roughly the quality of mediocre cassette recordings up to near mini-disc quality. The worst decoders sounded lousy. On the tracks that alternated every 10 seconds it was hard to hear the difference which we concluded was a psycho acoustic phenomenon of the brain not adjusting to rapid changes in the input (ABX tests anyone.) On tracks where he alternated the format every 30 seconds or so it was fairly easy to identify the cd tracks from the mp3 tracks. The best mp3 formats were acceptable for background music or parties. But even the good mp3 resulted in a loss of air and ambient information - i.e., the low level signals just as you would expect. It is clearly not a high-end listening format. The difference tracks were very interesting to listen to. Most had enough information to make out the song and certain features of the music. They compress out very little bass information and lots of very low level high frequency information. This was definitely a lot of work and required a senior engineer who is also an audiophile. The system I heard it on was mine which consists of a Linn Sondek CD12, Ayre Acoustic electronics and Vandersteen 5's. Admittedly a very high resolution system. It was a fascinating evening. I kept a copy of the disc to demonstrate for people overly enamored of all things new in the world of technology.
I have a friend who works for a hardware manufacturer in the MP3 market. I told him that MP3 sounds a lot like AM radio (dates me, huh?). When he tried an original-CD-vs.-MP3 comparison on his COMPUTER sound system (read: marginal at best), he couldn't believe it was the same record. I bet his employer wouldn't like to see his name attributed to that comment.
I buy mostly classical music from quality labels. You get great artwork, and splendid liner notes with info on composers, conductors, and muscians. I am very proud of my collection and would not want any second-class-looking or -sounding CDs in my collection. Besides, when I think of the cost of the hardware, I begin to think of how many CDs I could purchase instead.
Sounds significantly worse than the an original CD audio; which in 16 bit already sound pretty evil degraded stereo image, bad high frequency response etc..however excellent for previwing stuff if no precompression has been used...we broadcast on the web in mp3 LIVE
The music industry, particularly the lesser-known artists, is in a critical situation. It doesn't pay to play or record classical any more. We'll soon go back to the times when only the church and the aristocracy could afford music. I believe the music-loving public should behave in a more responsible way, and not try to send musicians to the poorhouse. Recording companies are doing a good job without our help.
Even with the best bit rates, MP3 still removes too much data to make listening pleasurable, especially at the popular rates used on the Internet. Add to that the poor quality of encoding codecs used by the mass public, and the MP3 files sound absolutely awful on a good system. On my B&W 801s, I'd much rather listen to a fading, distorted shortwave signal than the annoying warbling of MP3s.
Audio quality is inferior, especially on a good system. If MP3 and other compressed formats get too much acceptance, high-quality recordings (DVD-Audio, SACD) may die without ever gaining acceptance. Why have high-end gear with rubbish source material?
on a good system you will tell the differences between a good cd. cd rox mp3 not. mp3 is for kiddies when it comes to true listening. however i got several thousands of mp3. they serve me as a hint of what is good and not. RIAA can fuck themselves. I hate that org. fucking retards.
Guess it's OK for listening to the Fruitcakes Navels Gangstas oua!oua! I am going to kill you, bitch, Oua! Oua! I am going to kill your bro, too, Oua! Oua! Then I am going to kill myself, Oua! oua! Screw you all, Oua! oua! A little short on resolution for the Mahler V or Debussy La Mer.
Convenience factor outweighs sound-quality compromise for things like Christmas background music, etc. Compile selections on hard drive with Winamp software, connect soundcard to audio system amp, enjoy endless decent-quality, no-fuss audio.
I play the MP3s back through a Creative SoundBlaster Live! card. The fidelity is NOTICEABLY cleaner than through the standard soundcard in my other system. Through the Live! and my Creative/Cambridge DTT2500 speakers, the music sounds ALMOST CD-quality. Yes, I can hear the difference, and no, I don't think MP3 or any lossy compression is a substitute for a good CD recording, but I have a TON of music that is easily accessible and easily enjoyed. MP3 is here to stay! Keep in mind that not everyone is an audiophilewe make up only a SMALL portion of the audio market. The mass market has embraced the format, and I do not see it being replaced anytime soon, especially if the replacement has digital copy protection. Also, let's keep some perspective. This format sounds WAY better than any analog cassette recording, which was the big threat to the RIAA in the early '80s. Everyone dubbed from CD or radio to tape; now everyone is copying to MP3! Woohoo! DEATH TO THE RIAA!