Don Pearce wrote:
That is a big difference, but why would they bother to do it that way?
Far easier just to master the whole thing 6dB lower - it certainly won't
be running out of dynamic range at the bottom end. I speak as someone
who owns an Arcam Alpha 9, an HDCD player (very ashamed of myself for
falling for it).
Two words. Loudness war.
If you master it 6dB lower then it'll be 6dB quieter than everyone
else's CD. And that would never do.
But by using HDCD's Peak Extend you can satisfy the marketing droids at
the record label ("louder is better" etc) without ****ing off people
with decent kit too much.
My DVD player (Arcam DV79) does HDCD decoding and does it rather well.
One of the few DVD players that produces decent audio output from CDs
(whether HDCD or not).
LAME can take a 24-bit WAV and dither it back down to 16-bit. The
results speak for themselves. And yes, the difference you can hear is
as spectacular as the difference you can see.
What do you mean?
On the decoded version the snare drum "snaps" more, the mushyness and
overcompression is all gone.
And yet it's a standard 16/44.1 waveform. Tried encoding to 24-bit FLAC
and couldn't hear the difference between FLAC and 320Kbit MP3 with the
latest version of LAME (playing on a Squeezebox through an Arcam AVR250
via SPDIF).
24-bit has its place in the studio (extra headroom, better S/N ratio)
but I doubt many people can hear the difference on 2 channel stereo with
all that peak limiting and EQ applied. It's a bit like with digital
photography - I use 48-bit mode when doing all the post-processing in
Photoshop but then dither down to 24-bit colour for the final archive
version of the image (usually PNG).
(Disclaimer - I've been staring at a screen all day, hope that paragraph
above makes sense...)
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