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192kbps MP3s on a big sound system?
I think you or anyone else would be very hard pressed to reliably tell the
difference with any competently encoded track. (enough weasel-words there?) Mark Z. -- Please reply only to Group. I regret this is necessary. Viruses and spam have rendered my regular e-mail address useless. "Jase" wrote in message ... Are 192kbps MP3s of a high enough quality that they can stand up to playing on a monster club sound system? I've heard recommendations of a higher bitrate but would 192 suffice? TIA. |
192kbps MP3s on a big sound system?
"Scott Dorsey" wrote: I've never heard actual loss of bass with the LAME encoder, but I have heard a substantial loss of bass definition. Stuff goes from being clean and well defined to being flabby and centered on one note. But then again, on a club system you probably can't tell. This is particularly evident with real percussion recorded without serious processing. I have tried several encoders and algorithms and they all suffer in this respect, regardless of bitrate. I doubt it would be as noticeable with dance music, regardless of the system, as the percussion is generally electronic and centred on one note anyway. W |
192kbps MP3s on a big sound system?
In article , Old Fart at Play
writes citronzx wrote: You all must go to pretty fancy clubs where everyone is quiet and the music is played softly enough that you can even understand what the singer is singing. The acoustics in most clubs combined with the ambient noise makes for such a poor listening experience to begin with that I doubt anyone would notice the difference between an MP3 and a CD. You might notice a loss of bass with some tracks though. Excuse my ignorance but how are you going to lose bass with any bitrate of mp3? Last time I made some mp3s I used LAME and tried various bitrates until SWMBO said it was ok. We settled on variable bitrate with a minimum of 128kbps. -- Roger. Suppose SWMBO's vary a bit!. NPI!. Mine can reliably tell if stuff's been MPEGED unless its 256 K or higher..... -- Tony Sayer |
192kbps MP3s on a big sound system?
In article , Scott Dorsey
writes citronzx wrote: To tell you the truth I don't know enough about the compression algorithm to say why. My evidence only anecdotal. If I rip a cd and compare the mp3 ripped version to the original off the cd both played from my computer there seems to be a reduction in bass in the mp3 version. Now, I am very willing to admit that this my just be a psychological effect but that is way that it seems to sound to me. I've never heard actual loss of bass with the LAME encoder, but I have heard a substantial loss of bass definition. Stuff goes from being clean and well defined to being flabby and centered on one note. But then again, on a club system you probably can't tell. And forget about bass imaging. But then, few playback systems have any real bass imaging anyway, let alone club rigs. I think what you'll notice first is weirdness on the top end, but it might be just fine for dance stuff. --scott Yep that's it!, lower the rates till they notice. Lets never, ever, promote better quality sound 'tho, no that would never do!. The new digital age dawns. Never was so much promised and so little delivered!..... -- Tony Sayer |
192kbps MP3s on a big sound system?
just my 2cents worth but
vinyl still offers the best sound in a club environment, in terms of impact and depth. i've seen mp3 dudes drop sets after vinyl ones, and seen the atmosphere vanish and people leave the floor. mp3 sounds a little thin for big club tracks - just because something has the same SPL doesn't mean it has the same 'bounce' still, all things being relative, if all the other djs on the night play mp3 too, noone will ever notice... vib ps. if you're getting paid to dj i hope you're buying the music you play and not just kazaaing it karma is a bitch ; ) |
192kbps MP3s on a big sound system?
On 11 Feb 2004 01:11:51 -0800
(vibrations) wrote: vinyl still offers the best sound in a club environment, in terms of impact and depth. i've seen mp3 dudes drop sets after vinyl ones, and seen the atmosphere vanish and people leave the floor. either ****E encoding or dj. dont blame the format. -- Spyros lair: http://www.mnementh.co.uk/ |||| Maintainer: arm26 linux Do not meddle in the affairs of Dragons, for you are tasty and good with ketchup. |
192kbps MP3s on a big sound system?
----- Original Message -----
From: "Scott Dorsey" Newsgroups: rec.audio.pro,rec.audio.tech,uk.rec.audio Sent: Wednesday, February 11, 2004 11:02 AM Subject: 192kbps MP3s on a big sound system? citronzx wrote: To tell you the truth... (snip) I think what you'll notice first is weirdness on the top end, but it might be just fine for dance stuff. --scott -- "C'est un Nagra. C'est suisse, et tres, tres precis." IME, they just sound harsh, with no depth- which fits with what the encoder does, i.e. throw away the 'unimportant' information- lower level detail that you CAN hear on a big thumping system. Try out an mp3 & wav. (or CD) comparison somewhere with a big system if you can, & don't listen too closely, i.e. don't overanalyse it. Just decide which one hurts your ears. You WILL hear the difference, even with an ordinary domestic CD player. I think an audience listening to a night of loud mp3's would finish up feeling exhausted (read More exhausted than usual), perhaps without knowing why. Mp3's are just fatiguing. |
192kbps MP3s on a big sound system?
Jase wrote:
Are 192kbps MP3s of a high enough quality that they can stand up to playing on a monster club sound system? First of all two points that are semi-made in other comments already: it depends on encoder and decoder quality and on sound system quality. I've heard recommendations of a higher bitrate but would 192 suffice? I have decided on archiving the content of my compact cassette drawers in that format becasuse it - with the available encoder and played back via winamp or the audio application used - seems to be the optimum combination of qualify vs. space. There are caveats, some encoding and decoding software sounds less good. A "monster system" somehow suggests to the that it is "loud crap", in which case it really might not matter, but spl-control as a safety measure may matter, the more so as the highly compressed variants of music come with high long term average values that may make peak levels that would be "fairly safe" at a REAL (x) concert unsafe. As for the bass issues mentioned it appears to be that they could be caused by improper playback options selected in windows. It may come as a complete surprise to you, but windows generally knows best, and it knows that if you select desktop loudspeakers then they need "just that" undocumented eq. It has all kinds of other weird ways of bend the sound and maxbass it and whatever. For perceived linear and high quality playback choose the playback option headphones. I have tried to get documentation of what all those settings actually do via asking in the relevant newsgroup on microsofts newsserver, but to no avail. (x) no, not something to do with realmedia .... something to do with real sound and/or real sound rendered in unprocessed ways. Using the realmedia format would btw. be one of the ways of *not* getting acceptable results in the context in question, they are great for very low bitrates but less great at higher bitrates. TIA. YMMV Kind regards Peter Larsen -- ******************************************* * My site is at: http://www.muyiovatki.dk * ******************************************* |
192kbps MP3s on a big sound system?
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