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Here's an interesting looking little program for converting iTunes files to MP3. Anybody out there tried it yet?
From the Acoustic Research Centre at The Museum of Science & Industry in Manchester.
Thanks, JA.
A cool "map" for music lovers. My shopping list is longer already.
I heard music, and I liked it.
So, at the 2005 Home Entertainment Show in New York last April, I didn't need to be told to visit the DeVore Fidelity room. It was one of my first stops. This time I brought a stack of my own music. And friends, too. We listened happily to Sonic Youth and the Magnetic Fields and TV on the Radio.
And, again, music is what I heard. As a matter of fact, I had just seen Sonic Youth perform live at Maxwell's, so I had an excellent reference. Immediately, with the first shimmering guitar riffs and blistering hi-hat hits produced by the DeVore…
Phil Bradley has collected a bunch of resources that will help you solve tons of those nagging little problems you've been having. Good stuff!
Here's the original article by Timothy Holy and Zhongsheng Guo. It includes pitch-shifted samples and acoustical analyses.