
January 21st 17, 09:03 PM
posted to uk.rec.audio
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Current trends in audio
"Iain Churches" wrote in message
...
"Richard Robinson" wrote in message
...
I think a lot of people don't really listen to music very closely
or pay
much attention to what they're hearing..
I agree.
mp3 works OK provided the data rate is high enough. For most people
192K - or preferably 256K or 320K - is difficult to tell from an
original (classical or jazz) CD - I would exclude much of today's
'music!'
I heard this track on Classic today and was quite surprised by the
quality/recording acoustic* when I listened to it on line when I got
home.
http://www.hyperion-records.co.uk/dc.asp?dc=D_CDA68094
Track 8 - I Got Rhythm
*Others may of course disagree!
--
Woody
harrogate3 at ntlworld dot com
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January 22nd 17, 08:33 AM
posted to uk.rec.audio
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Current trends in audio
On 21-01-17 23:03, Woody wrote:
mp3 works OK provided the data rate is high enough. For most people
192K - or preferably 256K or 320K - is difficult to tell from an
original (classical or jazz) CD
Indeed. I would like to challenge anyone dismissing mp3 to a
blind listening test of well-processed mp3 at 256K. You would
have to be very well trained to spot the difference with typical
music material.
I once did a blind listening test on an audiophile forum to
see if people could hear a difference between "hi-res" and CD.
As an outlier test, I threw in a 256K mp3 file (decoded to
FLAC, so people couldn't tell from the file format what it
was). The mp3 file came out as the second most preferred of
all 9 alternatives - the "winner" was the 16/44.1 file that
I had increased the volume by 1 dB on...
Julf
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January 22nd 17, 09:30 AM
posted to uk.rec.audio
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Current trends in audio
Johan Helsingius wrote:
I once did a blind listening test on an audiophile forum to
see if people could hear a difference between "hi-res" and CD.
As an outlier test, I threw in a 256K mp3 file (decoded to
FLAC, so people couldn't tell from the file format what it
was). The mp3 file came out as the second most preferred of
all 9 alternatives - the "winner" was the 16/44.1 file that
I had increased the volume by 1 dB on... 
** That is a really worthless test methodology.
About 3 decades ago, I came up with a simple and really powerful one that avoided the horrible problems inherent in all A then B or ABX type tests.
Ocne set up, the test takes only a few seconds before the result is clear and convincing.
Unless your test operates in a similar way, it has no credibility with or impact on any listener. The principle is that of INSTANT change-over, while listening in stereo, in your home to your best loved tracks.
Read about it he
http://sound.whsites.net/absw.htm
Got any questions - I'm right here, every day.
..... Phil
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January 22nd 17, 09:57 AM
posted to uk.rec.audio
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Current trends in audio
On Sun, 22 Jan 2017 02:30:47 -0800 (PST), Phil Allison
wrote:
Johan Helsingius wrote:
I once did a blind listening test on an audiophile forum to
see if people could hear a difference between "hi-res" and CD.
As an outlier test, I threw in a 256K mp3 file (decoded to
FLAC, so people couldn't tell from the file format what it
was). The mp3 file came out as the second most preferred of
all 9 alternatives - the "winner" was the 16/44.1 file that
I had increased the volume by 1 dB on... 
** That is a really worthless test methodology.
About 3 decades ago, I came up with a simple and really powerful one that avoided the horrible problems inherent in all A then B or ABX type tests.
Ocne set up, the test takes only a few seconds before the result is clear and convincing.
Unless your test operates in a similar way, it has no credibility with or impact on any listener. The principle is that of INSTANT change-over, while listening in stereo, in your home to your best loved tracks.
Read about it he
http://sound.whsites.net/absw.htm
Got any questions - I'm right here, every day.
.... Phil
I find instant switchover causes problems, particularly in the bass
end. If the two systems happen to have opposite phase, there will be
an apparent sound change when switching over, even though the sound is
actually the same. I like to have about half a second of dead air to
wipe the phase memory. That way you only hear the actual differences,
not the artificial transient of the phase shift.
d
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January 22nd 17, 10:06 AM
posted to uk.rec.audio
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Current trends in audio
This though edges on the psycho acoustic issues as well as the compression
and other distortions issues.
In many cases, I cannot tell tthe difference between a home made cd of a
vinyl and the real one. The only time it notices is if you go overboard with
click suppression or rumbe and other noise reduction as on dying echoes you
hear the watermark effect or the little blips in level where the click used
to be.
However some of the early recordings I made when DAB was still relatively
new sound much better than a repeat of the same material on the same station
escpecially if that is radio 2. it seems engineering on that station is now
a gain riding auto level control and a compressor.
Brian
--
----- -
This newsgroup posting comes to you directly from...
The Sofa of Brian Gaff...
Blind user, so no pictures please!
"Don Pearce" wrote in message
...
On Sun, 22 Jan 2017 02:30:47 -0800 (PST), Phil Allison
wrote:
Johan Helsingius wrote:
I once did a blind listening test on an audiophile forum to
see if people could hear a difference between "hi-res" and CD.
As an outlier test, I threw in a 256K mp3 file (decoded to
FLAC, so people couldn't tell from the file format what it
was). The mp3 file came out as the second most preferred of
all 9 alternatives - the "winner" was the 16/44.1 file that
I had increased the volume by 1 dB on... 
** That is a really worthless test methodology.
About 3 decades ago, I came up with a simple and really powerful one that
avoided the horrible problems inherent in all A then B or ABX type tests.
Ocne set up, the test takes only a few seconds before the result is clear
and convincing.
Unless your test operates in a similar way, it has no credibility with or
impact on any listener. The principle is that of INSTANT change-over,
while listening in stereo, in your home to your best loved tracks.
Read about it he
http://sound.whsites.net/absw.htm
Got any questions - I'm right here, every day.
.... Phil
I find instant switchover causes problems, particularly in the bass
end. If the two systems happen to have opposite phase, there will be
an apparent sound change when switching over, even though the sound is
actually the same. I like to have about half a second of dead air to
wipe the phase memory. That way you only hear the actual differences,
not the artificial transient of the phase shift.
d
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January 22nd 17, 10:13 AM
posted to uk.rec.audio
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Current trends in audio
On Sun, 22 Jan 2017 11:06:25 -0000, "Brian Gaff"
wrote:
This though edges on the psycho acoustic issues as well as the compression
and other distortions issues.
In many cases, I cannot tell tthe difference between a home made cd of a
vinyl and the real one. The only time it notices is if you go overboard with
click suppression or rumbe and other noise reduction as on dying echoes you
hear the watermark effect or the little blips in level where the click used
to be.
However some of the early recordings I made when DAB was still relatively
new sound much better than a repeat of the same material on the same station
escpecially if that is radio 2. it seems engineering on that station is now
a gain riding auto level control and a compressor.
Brian
Yes, it absolutely is about psychoacoustics, not actual differences.
That's why it is important to eliminate it.
d
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January 22nd 17, 10:26 AM
posted to uk.rec.audio
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Current trends in audio
Don Pearce wrote:
I find instant switchover causes problems, particularly in the bass
end.
** Complete ********.
You did not bother to read my link.
If the two systems happen to have opposite phase,
** Whaaaaaatttt ????
Straw men all over the planet have their head hung in same after that POS.
Don - here's a tip for you.
When you have nothing worth while to contribute - shut up.
..... Phil
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January 22nd 17, 10:27 AM
posted to uk.rec.audio
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Current trends in audio
On Sun, 22 Jan 2017 03:26:27 -0800 (PST), Phil Allison
wrote:
Don Pearce wrote:
I find instant switchover causes problems, particularly in the bass
end.
** Complete ********.
You did not bother to read my link.
If the two systems happen to have opposite phase,
** Whaaaaaatttt ????
Straw men all over the planet have their head hung in same after that POS.
Don - here's a tip for you.
When you have nothing worth while to contribute - shut up.
.... Phil
No straw men. This happens - deal with it.
d
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January 22nd 17, 10:36 AM
posted to uk.rec.audio
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Current trends in audio
Don Pearce the asshole wrote:
** Complete ********.
You did not bother to read my link.
If the two systems happen to have opposite phase,
** Whaaaaaatttt ????
Straw men all over the planet have their heads hung in shame after that POS.
Don - here's a tip for you.
When you have nothing worth while to contribute - shut up.
No straw men.
** Of course it is a massive straw man - you trolling ****wit.
https://www.google.com.au/#q=straw+man+definition
FFS, double you IQ and get half a brain.
..... Phil
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January 22nd 17, 10:11 AM
posted to uk.rec.audio
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Current trends in audio
On 22-01-17 11:30, Phil Allison wrote:
** That is a really worthless test methodology.
True, but still better than sighted listening.
The principle is that of INSTANT change-over, while listening in
stereo, in your home to your best loved tracks.
Yes, an A/B switchbox is great - if you have two separate
audio chains to compare. For comparing two different source
files, you need player software that can do the same in
software. Foobar2000 has an ABX function for comparing
music files that allows you similar instant switching
between the two sound files.
Julf
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