Home |
Search |
Today's Posts |
#1
![]()
Posted to rec.audio.high-end
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
awareness that 'hi rez' is a solution looking for a problem, seems to
be growing... From the online April issue of MIX magazine http://mixonline.com/recording/mixin...ing/index.html ___ -S maybe they wanna rock. maybe they need to rock. Maybe it's for the money? But That's none of our business..our business as fans is to rock with them. |
#2
![]()
Posted to rec.audio.high-end
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Apr 7, 5:20 pm, Steven Sullivan wrote:
awareness that 'hi rez' is a solution looking for a problem, seems to be growing... From the online April issue of MIX magazine http://mixonline.com/recording/mixin...w_sampling/ind... Looks like hi-rez is a handy way to find better masterings, according to the article. Then there's the multichannel thing. Stephen |
#3
![]()
Posted to rec.audio.high-end
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Mon, 7 Apr 2008 15:20:03 -0700, Steven Sullivan wrote
(in article ): awareness that 'hi rez' is a solution looking for a problem, seems to be growing... From the online April issue of MIX magazine http://mixonline.com/recording/mixin...ing/index.html Thanks for the link. My own experience - on the recording end- is similar WRT sampling rates. Although I find it easier to record in 32-bit floating than in 16-bit (more headroom), I found that 96KHz vs 44.1 yielded nothing but larger files with no discernible audible improvements at all. I have a number of rehearsal sessions where I switch sample rates between 44./96 KHz and bit-depths (32-bit float, 24, 20, 16). And I can assure you that I cannot tell the difference in any way between 96KH and 44.1 played directly out of the laptop I used as a recorder through an Apogee Duet A/D-D/A. Of course, this type of experimentation is for my own personal edification and experience only because irrespective of how I master these sessions, the orchestra, wind ensemble, and jazz band that I record regularly get only Red Book CDs from me. |
#4
![]()
Posted to rec.audio.high-end
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Steven Sullivan wrote:
awareness that 'hi rez' is a solution looking for a problem, seems to be growing... From the online April issue of MIX magazine http://mixonline.com/recording/mixin...ing/index.html ___ -S maybe they wanna rock. maybe they need to rock. Maybe it's for the money? But That's none of our business..our business as fans is to rock with them. I think its funny that Mr. Winer thinks that comb filtering may be responsible for everyone's different impressions when sampling audio. Sitting down in the same spot with a give-or-take of 4 inches, impossible? I think not. Those of us who really like audio tend to aslo have a favorite chair or spot in the listening room that we like to sit in. I'm sorry, but I think's it's very easy for us mere mortals to sit in the same spot, definitely at least within in an inch. CD |
#5
![]()
Posted to rec.audio.high-end
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
"Codifus" wrote in message
I think its funny that Mr. Winer thinks that comb filtering may be responsible for everyone's different impressions when sampling audio. Based on about 30 years of doing high resolution listening tests, I think Winer is pretty insightful. Sitting down in the same spot with a give-or-take of 4 inches, impossible? I think not. It is not impossible, but it doesn't happen unless you are very intentional about it. Those of us who really like audio tend to aslo have a favorite chair or spot in the listening room that we like to sit in. Yes, but your chair doesn't happen to have a head clamp or even a HANS device (NASCAR). I'm sorry, but I think's it's very easy for us mere mortals to sit in the same spot, definitely at least within in an inch. It is not impossible, but it doesn't happen unless you are very intentional about it. And now, lets talk about so-called listening tests in Salons, friends houses, and at shows. ;-) |
#6
![]()
Posted to rec.audio.high-end
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
MINe109 wrote:
On Apr 7, 5:20 pm, Steven Sullivan wrote: awareness that 'hi rez' is a solution looking for a problem, seems to be growing... From the online April issue of MIX magazine http://mixonline.com/recording/mixin...w_sampling/ind... Looks like hi-rez is a handy way to find better masterings, according to the article. Then there's the multichannel thing. But it's not...at least for stereo DVD-A. I find as many 'modern' (as in , severaly reduced dynamic range) remasterings as there as I do 'audiophile' ones. http://www.avsforum.com/avs-vb/showthread.php?t=1009384 ___ -S maybe they wanna rock. maybe they need to rock. Maybe it's for the money? But That's none of our business..our business as fans is to rock with them. |
#7
![]()
Posted to rec.audio.high-end
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Codifus wrote:
Steven Sullivan wrote: awareness that 'hi rez' is a solution looking for a problem, seems to be growing... From the online April issue of MIX magazine http://mixonline.com/recording/mixin...ing/index.html ___ -S maybe they wanna rock. maybe they need to rock. Maybe it's for the money? But That's none of our business..our business as fans is to rock with them. I think its funny that Mr. Winer thinks that comb filtering may be responsible for everyone's different impressions when sampling audio. Sitting down in the same spot with a give-or-take of 4 inches, impossible? I think not. Those of us who really like audio tend to aslo have a favorite chair or spot in the listening room that we like to sit in. I'm sorry, but I think's it's very easy for us mere mortals to sit in the same spot, definitely at least within in an inch. Within 4 inches, yes...within an inch, maybe. But audible differences can result from positional differences of less than that. Solution: to do comparison rigorously, use headphones. ___ -S maybe they wanna rock. maybe they need to rock. Maybe it's for the money? But That's none of our business..our business as fans is to rock with them. |
#8
![]()
Posted to rec.audio.high-end
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Steven Sullivan wrote:
awareness that 'hi rez' is a solution looking for a problem, seems to be growing... From the online April issue of MIX magazine http://mixonline.com/recording/mixin...ing/index.html Interesting article. I liked Winer's statements. A lot of it is self suggestion, I'm sure of it. The cable stuff was hilarious. -- Mats |
#9
![]()
Posted to rec.audio.high-end
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On 8 Apr 2008 01:37:40 GMT, Codifus wrote:
Steven Sullivan wrote: awareness that 'hi rez' is a solution looking for a problem, seems to be growing... From the online April issue of MIX magazine http://mixonline.com/recording/mixin...ing/index.html ___ -S maybe they wanna rock. maybe they need to rock. Maybe it's for the money? But That's none of our business..our business as fans is to rock with them. I think its funny that Mr. Winer thinks that comb filtering may be responsible for everyone's different impressions when sampling audio. Sitting down in the same spot with a give-or-take of 4 inches, impossible? I think not. Those of us who really like audio tend to aslo have a favorite chair or spot in the listening room that we like to sit in. I'm sorry, but I think's it's very easy for us mere mortals to sit in the same spot, definitely at least within in an inch. CD Headphones anyone? |
#10
![]()
Posted to rec.audio.high-end
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Apr 8, 6:16 pm, "Arny Krueger" wrote:
"Codifus" wrote in message I think its funny that Mr. Winer thinks that comb filtering may be responsible for everyone's different impressions when sampling audio. Based on about 30 years of doing high resolution listening tests, I think Winer is pretty insightful. Sitting down in the same spot with a give-or-take of 4 inches, impossible? I think not. It is not impossible, but it doesn't happen unless you are very intentional about it. Those of us who really like audio tend to aslo have a favorite chair or spot in the listening room that we like to sit in. Yes, but your chair doesn't happen to have a head clamp or even a HANS device (NASCAR). I'm sorry, but I think's it's very easy for us mere mortals to sit in the same spot, definitely at least within in an inch. It is not impossible, but it doesn't happen unless you are very intentional about it. And now, lets talk about so-called listening tests in Salons, friends houses, and at shows. ;-) I didn't mean to discount his 30 years of experience and the comb filtering. That part I would tend to believe. It's the seating position issue. If anyone claims to be serious about audio, I would think it a pre-requisite would be that they pay attention to seating position. and to be able to sit within 4 or even 1 inch of a previous listening position, Mr. Winer suggests that it is analogous to aligning atoms. Finding the same seating position within and inch or 2 is not difficult at all. CD |
#11
![]()
Posted to rec.audio.high-end
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Apr 8, 6:17 pm, Steven Sullivan wrote:
Codifus wrote: Steven Sullivan wrote: awareness that 'hi rez' is a solution looking for a problem, seems to be growing... From the online April issue of MIX magazine http://mixonline.com/recording/mixin...w_sampling/ind... ___ -S maybe they wanna rock. maybe they need to rock. Maybe it's for the money? But That's none of our business..our business as fans is to rock with them. I think its funny that Mr. Winer thinks that comb filtering may be responsible for everyone's different impressions when sampling audio. Sitting down in the same spot with a give-or-take of 4 inches, impossible? I think not. Those of us who really like audio tend to aslo have a favorite chair or spot in the listening room that we like to sit in. I'm sorry, but I think's it's very easy for us mere mortals to sit in the same spot, definitely at least within in an inch. Within 4 inches, yes...within an inch, maybe. But audible differences can result from positional differences of less than that. Solution: to do comparison rigorously, use headphones. ___ -S maybe they wanna rock. maybe they need to rock. Maybe it's for the money? But That's none of our business..our business as fans is to rock with them. True. But those differences introduced by moving less than an inch away from your seating position won't be dramatic. They will be subtle. CD |
#12
![]()
Posted to rec.audio.high-end
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Apr 8, 5:17 pm, Steven Sullivan wrote:
MINe109 wrote: On Apr 7, 5:20 pm, Steven Sullivan wrote: awareness that 'hi rez' is a solution looking for a problem, seems to be growing... From the online April issue of MIX magazine http://mixonline.com/recording/mixin...w_sampling/ind... Looks like hi-rez is a handy way to find better masterings, according to the article. Then there's the multichannel thing. But it's not...at least for stereo DVD-A. I find as many 'modern' (as in , severaly reduced dynamic range) remasterings as there as I do 'audiophile' ones. http://www.avsforum.com/avs-vb/showthread.php?t=1009384 I'm, not sure what you mean. Do you mean on the forum you cite or do you have a large collection of 'smashed' DVD-As? The multichannel thing is still important. Stephen |
#13
![]()
Posted to rec.audio.high-end
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Tue, 8 Apr 2008 19:33:59 -0700, codifus wrote
(in article ): On Apr 8, 6:16 pm, "Arny Krueger" wrote: "Codifus" wrote in message I think its funny that Mr. Winer thinks that comb filtering may be responsible for everyone's different impressions when sampling audio. Based on about 30 years of doing high resolution listening tests, I think Winer is pretty insightful. Sitting down in the same spot with a give-or-take of 4 inches, impossible? I think not. It is not impossible, but it doesn't happen unless you are very intentional about it. Those of us who really like audio tend to aslo have a favorite chair or spot in the listening room that we like to sit in. Yes, but your chair doesn't happen to have a head clamp or even a HANS device (NASCAR). I'm sorry, but I think's it's very easy for us mere mortals to sit in the same spot, definitely at least within in an inch. It is not impossible, but it doesn't happen unless you are very intentional about it. And now, lets talk about so-called listening tests in Salons, friends houses, and at shows. ;-) I didn't mean to discount his 30 years of experience and the comb filtering. That part I would tend to believe. It's the seating position issue. If anyone claims to be serious about audio, I would think it a pre-requisite would be that they pay attention to seating position. and to be able to sit within 4 or even 1 inch of a previous listening position, Mr. Winer suggests that it is analogous to aligning atoms. Finding the same seating position within and inch or 2 is not difficult at all. CD I have a habit of moving my head around when I sit down to listen. Looking for a "sweet spot" I guess. I've never actually found one that wasn't real obvious and room caused, but I guess that's what Mr. Winer was referring to. Don't most of us do something similar? |
#14
![]()
Posted to rec.audio.high-end
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Tue, 8 Apr 2008 19:34:18 -0700, codifus wrote
(in article ): On Apr 8, 6:17 pm, Steven Sullivan wrote: Codifus wrote: Steven Sullivan wrote: awareness that 'hi rez' is a solution looking for a problem, seems to be growing... From the online April issue of MIX magazine http://mixonline.com/recording/mixin...w_sampling/ind... ___ -S maybe they wanna rock. maybe they need to rock. Maybe it's for the money? But That's none of our business..our business as fans is to rock with them. I think its funny that Mr. Winer thinks that comb filtering may be responsible for everyone's different impressions when sampling audio. Sitting down in the same spot with a give-or-take of 4 inches, impossible? I think not. Those of us who really like audio tend to aslo have a favorite chair or spot in the listening room that we like to sit in. I'm sorry, but I think's it's very easy for us mere mortals to sit in the same spot, definitely at least within in an inch. Within 4 inches, yes...within an inch, maybe. But audible differences can result from positional differences of less than that. Solution: to do comparison rigorously, use headphones. ___ -S maybe they wanna rock. maybe they need to rock. Maybe it's for the money? But That's none of our business..our business as fans is to rock with them. True. But those differences introduced by moving less than an inch away from your seating position won't be dramatic. They will be subtle. CD OTOH, so are the differences people say they hear between cables and amps and preamps.... And if that's what's going on, ABX testing won't work when the listener thinks he's heard a difference between two components under test every time he moves his head. |
#15
![]()
Posted to rec.audio.high-end
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Apr 9, 6:33 pm, Sonnova wrote:
On Tue, 8 Apr 2008 19:34:18 -0700, codifus wrote (in article ): On Apr 8, 6:17 pm, Steven Sullivan wrote: Codifus wrote: Steven Sullivan wrote: awareness that 'hi rez' is a solution looking for a problem, seems to be growing... From the online April issue of MIX magazine http://mixonline.com/recording/mixin...w_sampling/ind... ___ -S maybe they wanna rock. maybe they need to rock. Maybe it's for the money? But That's none of our business..our business as fans is to rock with them. I think its funny that Mr. Winer thinks that comb filtering may be responsible for everyone's different impressions when sampling audio. Sitting down in the same spot with a give-or-take of 4 inches, impossible? I think not. Those of us who really like audio tend to aslo have a favorite chair or spot in the listening room that we like to sit in. I'm sorry, but I think's it's very easy for us mere mortals to sit in the same spot, definitely at least within in an inch. Within 4 inches, yes...within an inch, maybe. But audible differences can result from positional differences of less than that. Solution: to do comparison rigorously, use headphones. ___ -S maybe they wanna rock. maybe they need to rock. Maybe it's for the money? But That's none of our business..our business as fans is to rock with them. True. But those differences introduced by moving less than an inch away from your seating position won't be dramatic. They will be subtle. CD OTOH, so are the differences people say they hear between cables and amps and preamps.... And if that's what's going on, ABX testing won't work when the listener thinks he's heard a difference between two components under test every time he moves his head. So very true. I once thought there was something wrong with my system. The high frequencies didn't seem to be as apparent. It turned out to be just me with a very slight head cold. CD |
#16
![]()
Posted to rec.audio.high-end
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
MINe109 wrote:
On Apr 8, 5:17 pm, Steven Sullivan wrote: MINe109 wrote: On Apr 7, 5:20 pm, Steven Sullivan wrote: awareness that 'hi rez' is a solution looking for a problem, seems to be growing... From the online April issue of MIX magazine http://mixonline.com/recording/mixin...w_sampling/ind... Looks like hi-rez is a handy way to find better masterings, according to the article. Then there's the multichannel thing. But it's not...at least for stereo DVD-A. I find as many 'modern' (as in , severaly reduced dynamic range) remasterings as there as I do 'audiophile' ones. http://www.avsforum.com/avs-vb/showthread.php?t=1009384 I'm, not sure what you mean. Do you mean on the forum you cite or do you have a large collection of 'smashed' DVD-As? Did you read that thread? I mean that a surprising number of DVD-As have 'smashed' stereo tracks ..at 'hi rez' sample rate.. Suggesting that 'hi rez' is not a particularly handy way to find better masterings (though chances are you'd do better with SACD releases, due to Scarlet Book specs) The multichannel thing is still important. Yes, it is, but that's a totally separate feature from the purported benefits of 'high rez' sample rates. ___ -S maybe they wanna rock. maybe they need to rock. Maybe it's for the money? But That's none of our business..our business as fans is to rock with them. |
#17
![]()
Posted to rec.audio.high-end
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Apr 10, 7:42 pm, Steven Sullivan wrote:
MINe109 wrote: On Apr 8, 5:17 pm, Steven Sullivan wrote: MINe109 wrote: On Apr 7, 5:20 pm, Steven Sullivan wrote: awareness that 'hi rez' is a solution looking for a problem, seems to be growing... From the online April issue of MIX magazine http://mixonline.com/recording/mixin...w_sampling/ind... Looks like hi-rez is a handy way to find better masterings, according to the article. Then there's the multichannel thing. But it's not...at least for stereo DVD-A. I find as many 'modern' (as in , severaly reduced dynamic range) remasterings as there as I do 'audiophile' ones. http://www.avsforum.com/avs-vb/showthread.php?t=1009384 I'm, not sure what you mean. Do you mean on the forum you cite or do you have a large collection of 'smashed' DVD-As? Did you read that thread? Yes. of course. Congrats! Someone found a smashed DVD-A or two. And the hideous Hollywood Records Queen mastering is held up as the Galant to the DVD-A Goofus. I'll check the shelves: I might be able to do that comparison. Even a loud DVD-A might be more pleasing without the cd eq. The screenshots look loud, but are they necessarily smashed? What was the dynamic range of previous issues? I assume these are the dedicated stereo layer, not a fold-down or other derived mix. I mean that a surprising number of DVD-As have 'smashed' stereo tracks ..at 'hi rez' sample rate.. Suggesting that 'hi rez' is not a particularly handy way to find better masterings (though chances are you'd do better with SACD releases, due to Scarlet Book specs) That undercuts 50% of your argument, but a better 'suggestion' would be the importance of the mastering. Hi-rez is still a good bet if you're not a Yes fan who would have the Analogue Productions lp anyway. The multichannel thing is still important. Yes, it is, but that's a totally separate feature from the purported benefits of 'high rez' sample rates. It's a handy way to increase your odds of a good mastering according to the article. Stephen |
#18
![]()
Posted to rec.audio.high-end
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
MINe109 wrote:
On Apr 10, 7:42 pm, Steven Sullivan wrote: MINe109 wrote: On Apr 8, 5:17 pm, Steven Sullivan wrote: MINe109 wrote: On Apr 7, 5:20 pm, Steven Sullivan wrote: awareness that 'hi rez' is a solution looking for a problem, seems to be growing... From the online April issue of MIX magazine http://mixonline.com/recording/mixin...w_sampling/ind... Looks like hi-rez is a handy way to find better masterings, according to the article. Then there's the multichannel thing. But it's not...at least for stereo DVD-A. I find as many 'modern' (as in , severaly reduced dynamic range) remasterings as there as I do 'audiophile' ones. http://www.avsforum.com/avs-vb/showthread.php?t=1009384 I'm, not sure what you mean. Do you mean on the forum you cite or do you have a large collection of 'smashed' DVD-As? Did you read that thread? Yes. of course. Congrats! Someone found a smashed DVD-A or two. Or two? Sorry, it's more than that. Right now the stereo DVD-As I've checked so far that have obviously compressed dynamic range are Fragile (Yes) Night at the Opera (Queen) Speaking In Tongues (Talking Heads) Tommy (The Who) Rumours (Fleetwood Mac) Gaucho (Steely Dan) Two Against Nature (Steely Dan) The ones that don';t are Harvest (Neil Young) Spectrum (Billy CObham) Machine Head (Deep Purple) that's a 7:3 ratio. And these DVD-As date from the beginning to DVD-A to its most recent incarnation as DualDisc. You see, the the difference between us is, I'm actually checking the mastering of DVD-A stereo tracks in an objective way...you're not. And the hideous Hollywood Records Queen mastering is held up as the Galant to the DVD-A Goofus. I'll check the shelves: I might be able to do that comparison. Even a loud DVD-A might be more pleasing without the cd eq. Could be. But again, hi-rez was sold as a way to get 'audiophile' quality sound. The screenshots look loud, but are they necessarily smashed? What was the dynamic range of previous issues? I assume these are the dedicated stereo layer, not a fold-down or other derived mix. Yes, of course they are dedicated stereo remasters. And in all but one case (Steely Dan's Two Agianst Nature, which was recorded digitally era) the recordings date from the analog era and there are previous CD versions with quite a bit more dynamic range. So, what's your definition of 'smashed'? I mean that a surprising number of DVD-As have 'smashed' stereo tracks ..at 'hi rez' sample rate.. Suggesting that 'hi rez' is not a particularly handy way to find better masterings (though chances are you'd do better with SACD releases, due to Scarlet Book specs) That undercuts 50% of your argument, 50%? That's rather tepid as cheerleading for the 'audiophile' quality of hi-rez remastering. but a better 'suggestion' would be the importance of the mastering. Hi-rez is still a good bet if you're not a Yes fan who would have the Analogue Productions lp anyway. LOL. WHy would I want an even 'lower-rez' version (an LP?) I'm happy with the Joe Gastwirt remaster from 1990. What I've heard of the Mobile Fidelity CD sounds fine too. The fact remains it's hardly an issue *just* for 'a Yes fan'. Again, I'm checking actual DVD-A discs, you're not. I'm finding so far that as more of them have restricted dynamic range, than not, on their stereo tracks. The multichannel thing is still important. Yes, it is, but that's a totally separate feature from the purported benefits of 'high rez' sample rates. It's a handy way to increase your odds of a good mastering according to the article. But you've got a completely different mix. ___ -S maybe they wanna rock. maybe they need to rock. Maybe it's for the money? But That's none of our business..our business as fans is to rock with them. |
#19
![]()
Posted to rec.audio.high-end
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Apr 12, 4:44 pm, Steven Sullivan wrote:
MINe109 wrote: On Apr 10, 7:42 pm, Steven Sullivan wrote: MINe109 wrote: On Apr 8, 5:17 pm, Steven Sullivan wrote: MINe109 wrote: On Apr 7, 5:20 pm, Steven Sullivan wrote: awareness that 'hi rez' is a solution looking for a problem, seems to be growing... From the online April issue of MIX magazine http://mixonline.com/recording/mixin...w_sampling/ind... Looks like hi-rez is a handy way to find better masterings, according to the article. Then there's the multichannel thing. But it's not...at least for stereo DVD-A. I find as many 'modern' (as in , severaly reduced dynamic range) remasterings as there as I do 'audiophile' ones. http://www.avsforum.com/avs-vb/showthread.php?t=1009384 I'm, not sure what you mean. Do you mean on the forum you cite or do you have a large collection of 'smashed' DVD-As? Did you read that thread? Yes. of course. Congrats! Someone found a smashed DVD-A or two. Or two? Sorry, it's more than that. Right now the stereo DVD-As I've checked so far that have obviously compressed dynamic range are Fragile (Yes) Night at the Opera (Queen) Speaking In Tongues (Talking Heads) Tommy (The Who) Rumours (Fleetwood Mac) Gaucho (Steely Dan) Two Against Nature (Steely Dan) The ones that don';t are Harvest (Neil Young) Spectrum (Billy CObham) Machine Head (Deep Purple) that's a 7:3 ratio. And these DVD-As date from the beginning to DVD-A to its most recent incarnation as DualDisc. Thanks for sharing that list. I have the Queen and Fleetwood Mac titles and can make casual observations concerning sound quality. You see, the the difference between us is, I'm actually checking the mastering of DVD-A stereo tracks in an objective way...you're not. There are more important differences. And the hideous Hollywood Records Queen mastering is held up as the Galant to the DVD-A Goofus. I'll check the shelves: I might be able to do that comparison. Even a loud DVD-A might be more pleasing without the cd eq. Could be. But again, hi-rez was sold as a way to get 'audiophile' quality sound. Works for Living Stereo reissues, Telarc, PentaTone, Linn, etc. The screenshots look loud, but are they necessarily smashed? What was the dynamic range of previous issues? I assume these are the dedicated stereo layer, not a fold-down or other derived mix. Yes, of course they are dedicated stereo remasters. And in all but one case (Steely Dan's Two Agianst Nature, which was recorded digitally era) the recordings date from the analog era and there are previous CD versions with quite a bit more dynamic range. So, what's your definition of 'smashed'? Lots of digital clipping. Not merely 'louder' or gently compressed. Irritating modern rock radio eq. I mean that a surprising number of DVD-As have 'smashed' stereo tracks ..at 'hi rez' sample rate.. Suggesting that 'hi rez' is not a particularly handy way to find better masterings (though chances are you'd do better with SACD releases, due to Scarlet Book specs) That undercuts 50% of your argument, 50%? That's rather tepid as cheerleading for the 'audiophile' quality of hi-rez remastering. Isn't that 100% of SACDs? That seems a good bet. And DVD-As aren't 100 % disappointing. but a better 'suggestion' would be the importance of the mastering. Hi-rez is still a good bet if you're not a Yes fan who would have the Analogue Productions lp anyway. LOL. WHy would I want an even 'lower-rez' version (an LP?) It could sound better, new mastering and all. The cover art is definitely larger. I'm happy with the Joe Gastwirt remaster from 1990. What I've heard of the Mobile Fidelity CD sounds fine too. I'm glad you like it. The original recording isn't that great. The fact remains it's hardly an issue *just* for 'a Yes fan'. Again, I'm checking actual DVD-A discs, you're not. I'm finding so far that as more of them have restricted dynamic range, than not, on their stereo tracks. I'm under no obligation to do so. Linking to screenshots isn't the same as supplying a list you've checked personally, although "obviously compressed" is debatable. The multichannel thing is still important. Yes, it is, but that's a totally separate feature from the purported benefits of 'high rez' sample rates. It's a handy way to increase your odds of a good mastering according to the article. But you've got a completely different mix. In addition to the stereo, which can be the original. Stephen I definitely prefer the ELP three-channel Brain Salad Surgery. |
#20
![]()
Posted to rec.audio.high-end
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
MINe109 wrote:
On Apr 12, 4:44 pm, Steven Sullivan wrote: MINe109 wrote: On Apr 10, 7:42 pm, Steven Sullivan wrote: MINe109 wrote: On Apr 8, 5:17 pm, Steven Sullivan wrote: MINe109 wrote: On Apr 7, 5:20 pm, Steven Sullivan wrote: awareness that 'hi rez' is a solution looking for a problem, seems to be growing... From the online April issue of MIX magazine http://mixonline.com/recording/mixin...w_sampling/ind... Looks like hi-rez is a handy way to find better masterings, according to the article. Then there's the multichannel thing. But it's not...at least for stereo DVD-A. I find as many 'modern' (as in , severaly reduced dynamic range) remasterings as there as I do 'audiophile' ones. http://www.avsforum.com/avs-vb/showthread.php?t=1009384 I'm, not sure what you mean. Do you mean on the forum you cite or do you have a large collection of 'smashed' DVD-As? Did you read that thread? Yes. of course. Congrats! Someone found a smashed DVD-A or two. Or two? Sorry, it's more than that. Right now the stereo DVD-As I've checked so far that have obviously compressed dynamic range are Fragile (Yes) Night at the Opera (Queen) Speaking In Tongues (Talking Heads) Tommy (The Who) Rumours (Fleetwood Mac) Gaucho (Steely Dan) Two Against Nature (Steely Dan) The ones that don';t are Harvest (Neil Young) Spectrum (Billy CObham) Machine Head (Deep Purple) that's a 7:3 ratio. And these DVD-As date from the beginning to DVD-A to its most recent incarnation as DualDisc. Thanks for sharing that list. I have the Queen and Fleetwood Mac titles and can make casual observations concerning sound quality. You see, the the difference between us is, I'm actually checking the mastering of DVD-A stereo tracks in an objective way...you're not. There are more important differences. And the hideous Hollywood Records Queen mastering is held up as the Galant to the DVD-A Goofus. I'll check the shelves: I might be able to do that comparison. Even a loud DVD-A might be more pleasing without the cd eq. Could be. But again, hi-rez was sold as a way to get 'audiophile' quality sound. Works for Living Stereo reissues, Telarc, PentaTone, Linn, etc. One would hope 'classical' music labels , at least, would meet the challenge. (Though Telarc has been known to do funny things with compression.) Pretty small market share, though. The screenshots look loud, but are they necessarily smashed? What was the dynamic range of previous issues? I assume these are the dedicated stereo layer, not a fold-down or other derived mix. Yes, of course they are dedicated stereo remasters. And in all but one case (Steely Dan's Two Agianst Nature, which was recorded digitally era) the recordings date from the analog era and there are previous CD versions with quite a bit more dynamic range. So, what's your definition of 'smashed'? Lots of digital clipping. Not merely 'louder' or gently compressed. Irritating modern rock radio eq. So, if you vastly reduce the dynamic range, but refrain from actual clipping, that's not 'smashed'. Right. See the Talking Heads release for an example. I mean that a surprising number of DVD-As have 'smashed' stereo tracks ..at 'hi rez' sample rate.. Suggesting that 'hi rez' is not a particularly handy way to find better masterings (though chances are you'd do better with SACD releases, due to Scarlet Book specs) That undercuts 50% of your argument, 50%? That's rather tepid as cheerleading for the 'audiophile' quality of hi-rez remastering. Isn't that 100% of SACDs? That seems a good bet. And DVD-As aren't 100 % disappointing. It's more tedious to check SACDs because that involves an analog--digital transfer in real time. ANd SACD spec makes it impossible to clip the signal in the DSD domain (though it could be clipped in PCM, then transcoded) But, again, 'perhaps all SACDs, and definitely some DVD-A' is still a rather tepid endorsement for the claims of 'audiophile sound' associated with "high rez" releases. but a better 'suggestion' would be the importance of the mastering. Hi-rez is still a good bet if you're not a Yes fan who would have the Analogue Productions lp anyway. LOL. WHy would I want an even 'lower-rez' version (an LP?) It could sound better, new mastering and all. The cover art is definitely larger. I've owned the LP since the early 70's, so I don't really need the cover art, thanks. I'm happy with the Joe Gastwirt remaster from 1990. What I've heard of the Mobile Fidelity CD sounds fine too. I'm glad you like it. The original recording isn't that great. But that;s rather beside the point, isn't it? Your detour here and in your previous posts, away from the general issue and into whether a particular recording 'matters' enough to you, is just that: a diversion. The fact remains it's hardly an issue *just* for 'a Yes fan'. Again, I'm checking actual DVD-A discs, you're not. I'm finding so far that as more of them have restricted dynamic range, than not, on their stereo tracks. I'm under no obligation to do so. Linking to screenshots isn't the same as supplying a list you've checked personally, although "obviously compressed" is debatable. If you have any familiarity with digital audio editing, compression can be quite *obvious* from comparing waveform views. The multichannel thing is still important. Yes, it is, but that's a totally separate feature from the purported benefits of 'high rez' sample rates. It's a handy way to increase your odds of a good mastering according to the article. But you've got a completely different mix. In addition to the stereo, which can be the original. THe stereo mix is almost always the original one. But as we see, for 'rock' releases it's often presented with a reduced dynamic range. I definitely prefer the ELP three-channel Brain Salad Surgery. BSS's multichannel mix is mostly 5.1, except for two tracks, which IIRC are 5.0. The two-channel stereo mix is a downmix of that. There is no 'three channel' mix that I'm aware of. -- ___ -S maybe they wanna rock. maybe they need to rock. Maybe it's for the money? But That's none of our business..our business as fans is to rock with them. |
#21
![]()
Posted to rec.audio.high-end
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Apr 13, 9:13 pm, Steven Sullivan wrote:
MINe109 wrote: On Apr 12, 4:44 pm, Steven Sullivan wrote: MINe109 wrote: On Apr 10, 7:42 pm, Steven Sullivan wrote: MINe109 wrote: On Apr 8, 5:17 pm, Steven Sullivan wrote: MINe109 wrote: On Apr 7, 5:20 pm, Steven Sullivan wrote: awareness that 'hi rez' is a solution looking for a problem, seems to be growing... From the online April issue of MIX magazine http://mixonline.com/recording/mixin...w_sampling/ind... Looks like hi-rez is a handy way to find better masterings, according to the article. Then there's the multichannel thing. But it's not...at least for stereo DVD-A. I find as many 'modern' (as in , severaly reduced dynamic range) remasterings as there as I do 'audiophile' ones. http://www.avsforum.com/avs-vb/showthread.php?t=1009384 I'm, not sure what you mean. Do you mean on the forum you cite or do you have a large collection of 'smashed' DVD-As? Did you read that thread? Yes. of course. Congrats! Someone found a smashed DVD-A or two. Or two? Sorry, it's more than that. Right now the stereo DVD-As I've checked so far that have obviously compressed dynamic range are Fragile (Yes) Night at the Opera (Queen) Speaking In Tongues (Talking Heads) Tommy (The Who) Rumours (Fleetwood Mac) Gaucho (Steely Dan) Two Against Nature (Steely Dan) The ones that don';t are Harvest (Neil Young) Spectrum (Billy CObham) Machine Head (Deep Purple) that's a 7:3 ratio. And these DVD-As date from the beginning to DVD-A to its most recent incarnation as DualDisc. Thanks for sharing that list. I have the Queen and Fleetwood Mac titles and can make casual observations concerning sound quality. You see, the the difference between us is, I'm actually checking the mastering of DVD-A stereo tracks in an objective way...you're not. There are more important differences. And the hideous Hollywood Records Queen mastering is held up as the Galant to the DVD-A Goofus. I'll check the shelves: I might be able to do that comparison. Even a loud DVD-A might be more pleasing without the cd eq. Could be. But again, hi-rez was sold as a way to get 'audiophile' quality sound. Works for Living Stereo reissues, Telarc, PentaTone, Linn, etc. One would hope 'classical' music labels , at least, would meet the challenge. (Though Telarc has been known to do funny things with compression.) Pretty small market share, though. Audiophile product usually is. The screenshots look loud, but are they necessarily smashed? What was the dynamic range of previous issues? I assume these are the dedicated stereo layer, not a fold-down or other derived mix. Yes, of course they are dedicated stereo remasters. And in all but one case (Steely Dan's Two Agianst Nature, which was recorded digitally era) the recordings date from the analog era and there are previous CD versions with quite a bit more dynamic range. So, what's your definition of 'smashed'? Lots of digital clipping. Not merely 'louder' or gently compressed. Irritating modern rock radio eq. So, if you vastly reduce the dynamic range, but refrain from actual clipping, that's not 'smashed'. Right. See the Talking Heads release for an example. Why 'right'? There's an irritating sound quality we should all be familiar with that is due to a combination of elements. The odd clipped waveform might be a sacrifice to preserve dynamic range. Reduced dynamic range isn't necessarily unpleasant to hear either. I mean that a surprising number of DVD-As have 'smashed' stereo tracks ..at 'hi rez' sample rate.. Suggesting that 'hi rez' is not a particularly handy way to find better masterings (though chances are you'd do better with SACD releases, due to Scarlet Book specs) That undercuts 50% of your argument, 50%? That's rather tepid as cheerleading for the 'audiophile' quality of hi-rez remastering. Isn't that 100% of SACDs? That seems a good bet. And DVD-As aren't 100 % disappointing. It's more tedious to check SACDs because that involves an analog--digital transfer in real time. ANd SACD spec makes it impossible to clip the signal in the DSD domain (though it could be clipped in PCM, then transcoded) One could listen to them. But, again, 'perhaps all SACDs, and definitely some DVD-A' is still a rather tepid endorsement for the claims of 'audiophile sound' associated with "high rez" releases. It beats the "vast majority" threshold of cd masterings. but a better 'suggestion' would be the importance of the mastering. Hi-rez is still a good bet if you're not a Yes fan who would have the Analogue Productions lp anyway. LOL. WHy would I want an even 'lower-rez' version (an LP?) It could sound better, new mastering and all. The cover art is definitely larger. I've owned the LP since the early 70's, so I don't really need the cover art, thanks. You asked. However, the DVD-A might be so reduced in dynamic range that an lp could be an acceptable medium. I'm happy with the Joe Gastwirt remaster from 1990. What I've heard of the Mobile Fidelity CD sounds fine too. I'm glad you like it. The original recording isn't that great. But that;s rather beside the point, isn't it? Your detour here and in your previous posts, away from the general issue and into whether a particular recording 'matters' enough to you, is just that: a diversion. I believe you brought up the Yes title. My 'detour' consisted of asking you to clarify your statements. The later stuff is in response to you and your tone. The fact remains it's hardly an issue *just* for 'a Yes fan'. Again, I'm checking actual DVD-A discs, you're not. I'm finding so far that as more of them have restricted dynamic range, than not, on their stereo tracks. I'm under no obligation to do so. Linking to screenshots isn't the same as supplying a list you've checked personally, although "obviously compressed" is debatable. If you have any familiarity with digital audio editing, compression can be quite *obvious* from comparing waveform views. I'm familiar with digital audio editing. Looking at views raises questions of resolution, etc, so what seems obvious is not necessarily so, The multichannel thing is still important. Yes, it is, but that's a totally separate feature from the purported benefits of 'high rez' sample rates. It's a handy way to increase your odds of a good mastering according to the article. But you've got a completely different mix. In addition to the stereo, which can be the original. THe stereo mix is almost always the original one. But as we see, for 'rock' releases it's often presented with a reduced dynamic range. Yes, we've come full circle. I definitely prefer the ELP three-channel Brain Salad Surgery. BSS's multichannel mix is mostly 5.1, except for two tracks, which IIRC are 5.0. The two-channel stereo mix is a downmix of that. There is no 'three channel' mix that I'm aware of. It's 3/2.1 channels. Stephen |
#22
![]()
Posted to rec.audio.high-end
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
MINe109 wrote:
On Apr 13, 9:13 pm, Steven Sullivan wrote: One would hope 'classical' music labels , at least, would meet the challenge. (Though Telarc has been known to do funny things with compression.) Pretty small market share, though. Audiophile product usually is. So, now we're talking about a small share of a small share. Fantastic. Except, classical DVD-A and SACD weren't the only hi-rez releases touted as 'audiophile' quality. From an audiophile standpoint it's already an absurd misuse of CD's potential (and its inital promise -- advertised as a way to finally get us 'what's on the master tapes) to compress the dynamics out of music; to do the same on on a 24-bit format is beyond ludicrous. So, if you vastly reduce the dynamic range, but refrain from actual clipping, that's not 'smashed'. Right. See the Talking Heads release for an example. Why 'right'? 'Right' as is, 'not right', i.e., sarcasm. There's an irritating sound quality we should all be familiar with that is due to a combination of elements. The odd clipped waveform might be a sacrifice to preserve dynamic range. Reduced dynamic range isn't necessarily unpleasant to hear either. It's rather unlikely that clipping and dynamic range limiting is used to *preserve* dynamic range, don't you think? Reduced dynamic range isn't necessarily unpleasant to hear either. Sure, in a noisy environment it's downright useful. But the germane comparison would be to the same release, in 'high rez' format, with full dynamic range. OR do you think your classical discs would sound better if Isn't that 100% of SACDs? That seems a good bet. And DVD-As aren't 100 % disappointing. It's more tedious to check SACDs because that involves an analog--digital transfer in real time. ANd SACD spec makes it impossible to clip the signal in the DSD domain (though it could be clipped in PCM, then transcoded) One could listen to them. One does do that. And one finds the occasional 'high rez' release sounding curiously louder than older CD versions. And one is conversant in psychoacoustics, the effect of loudness, as well as the effects that expectation has on perception of quality. One is also well aware that on hybrid SACDs, sometimes the PCM layer is mastered to less-than- audiophile standard. So one wonders how many 'high rez' PCM releases are actually being mastered to 'high' standards, and whether any are actually be mastered much like 'modern' CDs. But, again, 'perhaps all SACDs, and definitely some DVD-A' is still a rather tepid endorsement for the claims of 'audiophile sound' associated with "high rez" releases. It beats the "vast majority" threshold of cd masterings. Excluding classical CDs. By your logic, because a subset of CDs actually provide 'audiophile' sound, there's nothing to complain about. You asked. However, the DVD-A might be so reduced in dynamic range that an lp could be an acceptable medium. And wouldn't that be a ridiculous turn of events.... I'm happy with the Joe Gastwirt remaster from 1990. What I've heard of the Mobile Fidelity CD sounds fine too. I'm glad you like it. The original recording isn't that great. But that;s rather beside the point, isn't it? Your detour here and in your previous posts, away from the general issue and into whether a particular recording 'matters' enough to you, is just that: a diversion. I believe you brought up the Yes title. My 'detour' consisted of asking you to clarify your statements. The later stuff is in response to you and your tone. THe AVSforum thread that I linked to, is where I posted several DVD-A waveforms. It shows results for *several* titles right off the bat (Yes' 'Fragile' among them) and adds more over the course of its length. Your observation in reponse to this was (I quote): "Congrats! Someone found a smashed DVD-A or two." A poor start for you, as the someone was *me* ('krabapple' on AVSforum -- you seem rather unclear on that point), and it was rather more than *two*. Then *you* singled out Yes and 'Fragile' -- I hadn't mentioned them at all here -- in your next response (I quote)"Hi-rez is still a good bet if you're not a Yes fan who would have the Analogue Productions LP anyway" -- a bizarre claim on several levels, not least of which is that Yes is clearly *not* the only group whose classic albums are being offered in sub-'audiophile' quality on a 'high rez' medium touted as 'audiophile'. The Yes/Fragile tangent that *you* for some reason initiated ended with you declaring (I quote) "The original recording isn't that great." At that point, I'm wondering how much of the AVSforum thread you actually read, and whther mention whether you have a point to make at all. And you're wondering about MY tone? One amusing upshot is that I'm not sure there's any actual *clipping* on the highly compressed DVD-A remastering of the 'not that great' Yes recording, but there certainly *is* clipping the DVD-A of Steely Dan's arguably quite-great-recording 'Gaucho'. Which raises the question, what is clipping doing on a remaster of late-period Steely Dan? The fact remains it's hardly an issue *just* for 'a Yes fan'. Again, I'm checking actual DVD-A discs, you're not. I'm finding so far that as more of them have restricted dynamic range, than not, on their stereo tracks. I'm under no obligation to do so. Linking to screenshots isn't the same as supplying a list you've checked personally, although "obviously compressed" is debatable. If you have any familiarity with digital audio editing, compression can be quite *obvious* from comparing waveform views. I'm familiar with digital audio editing. Looking at views raises questions of resolution, etc, so what seems obvious is not necessarily so, All of my waveforms in the first AVSForum post thread were to the same scale, showing what I trust is an obvious visible difference between waveforms that leave 'room' between peaks and average, and those that don't. I also presented views at both standard and zoomed-in resolution, demonstrating the existence of clipping on 'Gaucho' http://www.avsforum.com/avs-vb/showt...5#post13464905 So again, I have to wonder how far into the thread you got. I could just as well have present crest factor calculations (peak - average) to quantitate the same findings...they would entirely support the claim that the waveforms that LOOK more compressed do have less range than the ones that don't. As I said, *compression* is pretty obvious if you have seen the 'progression ' of what waveforms from early 80s through early 90s remasterings looked like. What is not always obvious, at low resolution, is whether actual clipping is occurring. But compression without clipping is still dynamic range reduction...and can still be massive enough to warrant the term 'smashing'. The multichannel thing is still important. Yes, it is, but that's a totally separate feature from the purported benefits of 'high rez' sample rates. It's a handy way to increase your odds of a good mastering according to the article. But you've got a completely different mix. In addition to the stereo, which can be the original. THe stereo mix is almost always the original one. But as we see, for 'rock' releases it's often presented with a reduced dynamic range. Yes, we've come full circle. We never really left the starting point. Since the topic of compressed 'high rez' releases came up, I've been pointing up the disjunction between what is advertised/assumed for 'high rez' releases, and what is actually delivered, and you've been tossing peanuts from the gallery , most of which are beside the point. I definitely prefer the ELP three-channel Brain Salad Surgery. BSS's multichannel mix is mostly 5.1, except for two tracks, which IIRC are 5.0. The two-channel stereo mix is a downmix of that. There is no 'three channel' mix that I'm aware of. It's 3/2.1 channels. "Still You Turn Me On' and 'Benny the Bouncer' are 3/2. The rest are 3/2.1. None are 'three channel' (3.0). -- -S maybe they wanna rock. maybe they need to rock. Maybe it's for the money? But That's none of our business..our business as fans is to rock with them. |
#23
![]()
Posted to rec.audio.high-end
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Apr 18, 4:42 pm, Steven Sullivan wrote:
MINe109 wrote: On Apr 13, 9:13 pm, Steven Sullivan wrote: One would hope 'classical' music labels , at least, would meet the challenge. (Though Telarc has been known to do funny things with compression.) Pretty small market share, though. Audiophile product usually is. So, now we're talking about a small share of a small share. Fantastic. Yes, as we always were. Except, classical DVD-A and SACD weren't the only hi-rez releases touted as 'audiophile' quality. The implied question is whether the percentage of good-sounding releases is better than the percentage of good-sounding cd releases. From an audiophile standpoint it's already an absurd misuse of CD's potential (and its inital promise -- advertised as a way to finally get us 'what's on the master tapes) to compress the dynamics out of music; to do the same on on a 24-bit format is beyond ludicrous. Sure. So, if you vastly reduce the dynamic range, but refrain from actual clipping, that's not 'smashed'. Right. See the Talking Heads release for an example. Why 'right'? 'Right' as is, 'not right', i.e., sarcasm. It's misplaced. The term 'smashed' implies qualities in addition to heavy compression. We already have a term for over-compression: over- compression. There's an irritating sound quality we should all be familiar with that is due to a combination of elements. The odd clipped waveform might be a sacrifice to preserve dynamic range. Reduced dynamic range isn't necessarily unpleasant to hear either. It's rather unlikely that clipping and dynamic range limiting is used to *preserve* dynamic range, don't you think? In practice, but suppose one had a dynamic recording and chose to allow a digital clip or two in passing rather than compress. I believe a Chesky test disc was criticized for such a choice some years ago. Reduced dynamic range isn't necessarily unpleasant to hear either. Sure, in a noisy environment it's downright useful. But the germane comparison would be to the same release, in 'high rez' format, with full dynamic range. OR do you think your classical discs would sound better if Or original mastering Nirvana vs modern Nirvana. Many rock performances aren't that dynamic to begin with, so the objections have more to do with rise time, etc. Isn't that 100% of SACDs? That seems a good bet. And DVD-As aren't 100 % disappointing. It's more tedious to check SACDs because that involves an analog--digital transfer in real time. ANd SACD spec makes it impossible to clip the signal in the DSD domain (though it could be clipped in PCM, then transcoded) One could listen to them. One does do that. And one finds the occasional 'high rez' release sounding curiously louder than older CD versions. And one is conversant in psychoacoustics, the effect of loudness, as well as the effects that expectation has on perception of quality. One is also well aware that on hybrid SACDs, sometimes the PCM layer is mastered to less-than- audiophile standard. So one wonders how many 'high rez' PCM releases are actually being mastered to 'high' standards, and whether any are actually be mastered much like 'modern' CDs. I suppose, but I don't hear "louder," I just set the volume to where I want it to be. The PCM layer thing is well-known, as in Stereophile comments on the Pink Floyd Dark Side SACD. But, again, 'perhaps all SACDs, and definitely some DVD-A' is still a rather tepid endorsement for the claims of 'audiophile sound' associated with "high rez" releases. It beats the "vast majority" threshold of cd masterings. Excluding classical CDs. By your logic, because a subset of CDs actually provide 'audiophile' sound, there's nothing to complain about. No, it makes me wish more cds were of high quality. But going to classical is a dodge as most of them have problems, too. You asked. However, the DVD-A might be so reduced in dynamic range that an lp could be an acceptable medium. And wouldn't that be a ridiculous turn of events.... Why? The sound of older recordings includes the effects of mastering that can be hard to duplicate for cd. See Bill Price discussing the Clash at mixonline. I'm happy with the Joe Gastwirt remaster from 1990. What I've heard of the Mobile Fidelity CD sounds fine too. I'm glad you like it. The original recording isn't that great. But that;s rather beside the point, isn't it? Your detour here and in your previous posts, away from the general issue and into whether a particular recording 'matters' enough to you, is just that: a diversion. I believe you brought up the Yes title. My 'detour' consisted of asking you to clarify your statements. The later stuff is in response to you and your tone. THe AVSforum thread that I linked to, is where I posted several DVD-A waveforms. It shows results for *several* titles right off the bat (Yes' 'Fragile' among them) and adds more over the course of its length. Your observation in reponse to this was (I quote): "Congrats! Someone found a smashed DVD-A or two." A poor start for you, as the someone was *me* ('krabapple' on AVSforum -- you seem rather unclear on that point), and it was rather more than *two*. Then *you* singled out Yes and 'Fragile' -- I hadn't mentioned them at all here -- in your next response (I quote)"Hi-rez is still a good bet if you're not a Yes fan who would have the Analogue Productions LP anyway" -- a bizarre claim on several levels, not least of which is that Yes is clearly *not* the only group whose classic albums are being offered in sub-'audiophile' quality on a 'high rez' medium touted as 'audiophile'. The Yes/Fragile tangent that *you* for some reason initiated ended with you declaring (I quote) "The original recording isn't that great." At that point, I'm wondering how much of the AVSforum thread you actually read, and whther mention whether you have a point to make at all. And you're wondering about MY tone? Yes, I am. For one thing, you're missing the implied comparison to cd mastering from the original article. For another, you appear to be attempting to universalize your experience from a handful of examples in response to a tepid generalization. No, I didn't bother to guess that it was you posting under a different handle, although I don't see why that should make any difference. If it were important to you, perhaps you should identify yourself as you link. I see one of my questions anticipated further developments in the thread (stereo layer vs multichannel). One amusing upshot is that I'm not sure there's any actual *clipping* on the highly compressed DVD-A remastering of the 'not that great' Yes recording, but there certainly *is* clipping the DVD-A of Steely Dan's arguably quite-great-recording 'Gaucho'. Which raises the question, what is clipping doing on a remaster of late-period Steely Dan? Enabling greater dynamic range overall. The fact remains it's hardly an issue *just* for 'a Yes fan'. Again, I'm checking actual DVD-A discs, you're not. I'm finding so far that as more of them have restricted dynamic range, than not, on their stereo tracks. I'm under no obligation to do so. Linking to screenshots isn't the same as supplying a list you've checked personally, although "obviously compressed" is debatable. If you have any familiarity with digital audio editing, compression can be quite *obvious* from comparing waveform views. I'm familiar with digital audio editing. Looking at views raises questions of resolution, etc, so what seems obvious is not necessarily so, All of my waveforms in the first AVSForum post thread were to the same scale, showing what I trust is an obvious visible difference between waveforms that leave 'room' between peaks and average, and those that don't. I also presented views at both standard and zoomed-in resolution, demonstrating the existence of clipping on 'Gaucho' http://www.avsforum.com/avs-vb/showt...5#post13464905 So again, I have to wonder how far into the thread you got. It doesn't matter. I've since looked into it and found some of my questions were answered concerning resolution, etc. I could just as well have present crest factor calculations (peak - average) to quantitate the same findings...they would entirely support the claim that the waveforms that LOOK more compressed do have less range than the ones that don't. That would have been very helpful. Please do so to see if that is the case. As I said, *compression* is pretty obvious if you have seen the 'progression ' of what waveforms from early 80s through early 90s remasterings looked like. What is not always obvious, at low resolution, is whether actual clipping is occurring. But compression without clipping is still dynamic range reduction...and can still be massive enough to warrant the term 'smashing'. No, smashing implies additional faults. The multichannel thing is still important. Yes, it is, but that's a totally separate feature from the purported benefits of 'high rez' sample rates. It's a handy way to increase your odds of a good mastering according to the article. But you've got a completely different mix. In addition to the stereo, which can be the original. THe stereo mix is almost always the original one. But as we see, for 'rock' releases it's often presented with a reduced dynamic range. Yes, we've come full circle. We never really left the starting point. Thanks for agreeing with my agreement. Since the topic of compressed 'high rez' releases came up, I've been pointing up the disjunction between what is advertised/assumed for 'high rez' releases, and what is actually delivered, and you've been tossing peanuts from the gallery , most of which are beside the point. No, I repeated an modest assertion from the article and you overstated your evidence. I definitely prefer the ELP three-channel Brain Salad Surgery. BSS's multichannel mix is mostly 5.1, except for two tracks, which IIRC are 5.0. The two-channel stereo mix is a downmix of that. There is no 'three channel' mix that I'm aware of. It's 3/2.1 channels. "Still You Turn Me On' and 'Benny the Bouncer' are 3/2. The rest are 3/2.1. None are 'three channel' (3.0). I don't have a sub. The high-rez mix must be well-done as I didn't notice any rear speaker activity, especially in comparison to the 5.1 dts mix. Stephen |
#24
![]()
Posted to rec.audio.high-end
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Steven Sullivan wrote:
MINe109 wrote: On Apr 13, 9:13 pm, Steven Sullivan wrote: One would hope 'classical' music labels , at least, would meet the challenge. (Though Telarc has been known to do funny things with compression.) Pretty small market share, though. Audiophile product usually is. So, now we're talking about a small share of a small share. Fantastic. Except, classical DVD-A and SACD weren't the only hi-rez releases touted as 'audiophile' quality. From an audiophile standpoint it's already an absurd misuse of CD's potential (and its inital promise -- advertised as a way to finally get us 'what's on the master tapes) to compress the dynamics out of music; to do the same on on a 24-bit format is beyond ludicrous. So, if you vastly reduce the dynamic range, but refrain from actual clipping, that's not 'smashed'. Right. See the Talking Heads release for an example. Why 'right'? 'Right' as is, 'not right', i.e., sarcasm. that was a typo -- 'is' should be 'in'. |
#25
![]()
Posted to rec.audio.high-end
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Steven Sullivan wrote:
MINe109 wrote: On Apr 13, 9:13 pm, Steven Sullivan wrote: One would hope 'classical' music labels , at least, would meet the challenge. (Though Telarc has been known to do funny things with compression.) Pretty small market share, though. Audiophile product usually is. So, now we're talking about a small share of a small share. Fantastic. Except, classical DVD-A and SACD weren't the only hi-rez releases touted as 'audiophile' quality. From an audiophile standpoint it's already an absurd misuse of CD's potential (and its inital promise -- advertised as a way to finally get us 'what's on the master tapes) to compress the dynamics out of music; to do the same on on a 24-bit format is beyond ludicrous. So, if you vastly reduce the dynamic range, but refrain from actual clipping, that's not 'smashed'. Right. See the Talking Heads release for an example. Why 'right'? 'Right' as is, 'not right', i.e., sarcasm. There's an irritating sound quality we should all be familiar with that is due to a combination of elements. The odd clipped waveform might be a sacrifice to preserve dynamic range. Reduced dynamic range isn't necessarily unpleasant to hear either. It's rather unlikely that clipping and dynamic range limiting is used to *preserve* dynamic range, don't you think? Reduced dynamic range isn't necessarily unpleasant to hear either. Sure, in a noisy environment it's downright useful. But the germane comparison would be to the same release, in 'high rez' format, with full dynamic range. OR do you think your classical discs would sound better if and another typo ....'if their dynamic range was limited during mastering, as for the rock DVD-As I'm discussing?" -- -S maybe they wanna rock. maybe they need to rock. Maybe it's for the money? But That's none of our business..our business as fans is to rock with them. |
#26
![]()
Posted to rec.audio.high-end
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
[Since this subthread has become rather circular as both members have
mentioned, it is ended. No more posts will be accepted on it. -- deb] MINe109 wrote: On Apr 18, 4:42 pm, Steven Sullivan wrote: MINe109 wrote: On Apr 13, 9:13 pm, Steven Sullivan wrote: One would hope 'classical' music labels , at least, would meet the challenge. (Though Telarc has been known to do funny things with compression.) Pretty small market share, though. Audiophile product usually is. So, now we're talking about a small share of a small share. Fantastic. Yes, as we always were. except, it seems that a considerable share of DVD-As might actually be mastered like modern CDs, rather thank like 'audiophile' product. Which was my original point. Except, classical DVD-A and SACD weren't the only hi-rez releases touted as 'audiophile' quality. The implied question is whether the percentage of good-sounding releases is better than the percentage of good-sounding cd releases. But then you went off into a genre tangent. From an audiophile standpoint it's already an absurd misuse of CD's potential (and its inital promise -- advertised as a way to finally get us 'what's on the master tapes) to compress the dynamics out of music; to do the same on on a 24-bit format is beyond ludicrous. Sure. So, if you vastly reduce the dynamic range, but refrain from actual clipping, that's not 'smashed'. Right. See the Talking Heads release for an example. Why 'right'? 'Right' as is, 'not right', i.e., sarcasm. It's misplaced. The term 'smashed' implies qualities in addition to heavy compression. We already have a term for over-compression: over- compression. Neither term is official. And really, you are splittig semantic hairs here. Meanwhile,the point remains: seven out of ten "high resolution" DVD-A stereo remasters I've checked so far, via analysis of direct digital rips, have had their dynamic range limited more or less severely, very much like modern CD remasters, and very much unlike what one would expect of an 'audiophile' remastering. There's an irritating sound quality we should all be familiar with that is due to a combination of elements. The odd clipped waveform might be a sacrifice to preserve dynamic range. Reduced dynamic range isn't necessarily unpleasant to hear either. It's rather unlikely that clipping and dynamic range limiting is used to *preserve* dynamic range, don't you think? In practice, but suppose one had a dynamic recording and chose to allow a digital clip or two in passing rather than compress. I believe a Chesky test disc was criticized for such a choice some years ago. 'A digital clip or two' -- and I beleive it was Telarc that was so criticized -- is not what I'm seeing on 7/10 of these discs. What is seen is either considerable amount of digital compression, or that, PLUS clipping. Never clipping but no compression. Aside from which, at 24 bit transfer and delivery, there would be no rationale for allowing even a 'digital clip or two', given the available headroom. Reduced dynamic range isn't necessarily unpleasant to hear either. Sure, in a noisy environment it's downright useful. But the germane comparison would be to the same release, in 'high rez' format, with full dynamic range. OR do you think your classical discs would sound better if Or original mastering Nirvana vs modern Nirvana. Many rock performances aren't that dynamic to begin with, so the objections have more to do with rise time, etc. Does it make sense to *reduce* the range further, then...particularly for release on a medium touted for it s'audiophile' capabilities? Isn't that 100% of SACDs? That seems a good bet. And DVD-As aren't 100 % disappointing. It's more tedious to check SACDs because that involves an analog--digital transfer in real time. ANd SACD spec makes it impossible to clip the signal in the DSD domain (though it could be clipped in PCM, then transcoded) One could listen to them. One does do that. And one finds the occasional 'high rez' release sounding curiously louder than older CD versions. And one is conversant in psychoacoustics, the effect of loudness, as well as the effects that expectation has on perception of quality. One is also well aware that on hybrid SACDs, sometimes the PCM layer is mastered to less-than- audiophile standard. So one wonders how many 'high rez' PCM releases are actually being mastered to 'high' standards, and whether any are actually be mastered much like 'modern' CDs. I suppose, but I don't hear "louder," I just set the volume to where I want it to be. If you are setting the volume lower for B vs A, then you are hearing 'louder' for B. The PCM layer thing is well-known, as in Stereophile comments on the Pink Floyd Dark Side SACD. No kidding. I measured it myself too. But, again, 'perhaps all SACDs, and definitely some DVD-A' is still a rather tepid endorsement for the claims of 'audiophile sound' associated with "high rez" releases. It beats the "vast majority" threshold of cd masterings. Excluding classical CDs. By your logic, because a subset of CDs actually provide 'audiophile' sound, there's nothing to complain about. No, it makes me wish more cds were of high quality. But going to classical is a dodge as most of them have problems, too. You wish more CDs were of higher quality.. but you're willing to spend a week arguing with for reporting that DVD-As were/are being mastered at 'CD quality'. Strange. You asked. However, the DVD-A might be so reduced in dynamic range that an lp could be an acceptable medium. And wouldn't that be a ridiculous turn of events.... Why? The sound of older recordings includes the effects of mastering that can be hard to duplicate for cd. See Bill Price discussing the Clash at mixonline. Sorry, you'll have to be more descriptive, or provide a direct link. I don't know what Bill Price says on mixonline, but any audible effects on the master tape can be captured digitally. Any 'effects' put onto an LP at the cutting stage (so they weren't on the master tapes) and which can't be simulated digitally, can be captured by digitizing the LP. There is nothing audible on an LP -- euphonic or not -- that can't be rendered with utmost accuracy by a digital recording of the LP (a 'needle drop'). Only the Michael Fremers of the world believe otherwise. So even in this highly contrived case -- i.e, where for some reason you want to incldue the euphonic distortions that are particular to LP -- there's still no sonic reason to release an LP, except for the neat-o cover art. A digital copy of it will sound the same, AND be immune to surface noise and tics and playback wear. I'm happy with the Joe Gastwirt remaster from 1990. What I've heard of the Mobile Fidelity CD sounds fine too. I'm glad you like it. The original recording isn't that great. But that;s rather beside the point, isn't it? Your detour here and in your previous posts, away from the general issue and into whether a particular recording 'matters' enough to you, is just that: a diversion. I believe you brought up the Yes title. My 'detour' consisted of asking you to clarify your statements. The later stuff is in response to you and your tone. THe AVSforum thread that I linked to, is where I posted several DVD-A waveforms. It shows results for *several* titles right off the bat (Yes' 'Fragile' among them) and adds more over the course of its length. Your observation in reponse to this was (I quote): "Congrats! Someone found a smashed DVD-A or two." A poor start for you, as the someone was *me* ('krabapple' on AVSforum -- you seem rather unclear on that point), and it was rather more than *two*. Then *you* singled out Yes and 'Fragile' -- I hadn't mentioned them at all here -- in your next response (I quote)"Hi-rez is still a good bet if you're not a Yes fan who would have the Analogue Productions LP anyway" -- a bizarre claim on several levels, not least of which is that Yes is clearly *not* the only group whose classic albums are being offered in sub-'audiophile' quality on a 'high rez' medium touted as 'audiophile'. The Yes/Fragile tangent that *you* for some reason initiated ended with you declaring (I quote) "The original recording isn't that great." At that point, I'm wondering how much of the AVSforum thread you actually read, and whther mention whether you have a point to make at all. And you're wondering about MY tone? Yes, I am. For one thing, you're missing the implied comparison to cd mastering from the original article. For another, you appear to be attempting to universalize your experience from a handful of examples in response to a tepid generalization. Who's 'tepid generalization' would that be? I posted the link to the article about cd vs DSD. Here's what you took from it: "Looks like hi-rez is a handy way to find better masterings, according to the article. Then there's the multichannel thing. " I presented evidence that it may not be as 'handy' a way to find better masterings, as you (and the author of the article) believe. Seven out of ten popular music DVD-As checked -- not obscurities or modern digital recordings, but more typically well-known, analog recordings from the late 60's to early 80s by major artists, and surely among the better-selling DVD-As -- were mastered like CDs, not 'better'. Really, I'm tired of replaying the history of this thread for you, and little miffed that the moderators are holding me, but not you, to a strict standard of quoting. No, I didn't bother to guess that it was you posting under a different handle, although I don't see why that should make any difference. If it were important to you, perhaps you should identify yourself as you link. Actually, I thought it was obvious. My mistake. I see one of my questions anticipated further developments in the thread (stereo layer vs multichannel). Yes, and it was irrelevant there, too, to the issue of: how do the stereo remasterings on the 'high rez' releases, compare the 'standard rez' CD masterings? One amusing upshot is that I'm not sure there's any actual *clipping* on the highly compressed DVD-A remastering of the 'not that great' Yes recording, but there certainly *is* clipping the DVD-A of Steely Dan's arguably quite-great-recording 'Gaucho'. Which raises the question, what is clipping doing on a remaster of late-period Steely Dan? Enabling greater dynamic range overall. Wrong for the reasons cited above (there's no reason to introduce clipping in a 24-bit format, for the purpose of capturing the full range of an analog master tape) , and certainly wrong in this case. The DVD-A stereo remastering displays LESS dynamic range than older CD versions. Same is true of the other DVD-As. So again, I have to wonder how far into the thread you got. It doesn't matter. I've since looked into it and found some of my questions were answered concerning resolution, etc. ....and found that at higher visual resolution, one can confirm clipping. It's not required to diagnose the application of compression, though. I could just as well have present crest factor calculations (peak - average) to quantitate the same findings...they would entirely support the claim that the waveforms that LOOK more compressed do have less range than the ones that don't. That would have been very helpful. Please do so to see if that is the case. It's only 'helpful'if you persist in refusing to accept the visual evidence. Since you do, which waveforms would you like to see the crest factors for? I don't want to waste further time showing you evidence you'll refuse to accept. As I said, *compression* is pretty obvious if you have seen the 'progression ' of what waveforms from early 80s through early 90s remasterings looked like. What is not always obvious, at low resolution, is whether actual clipping is occurring. But compression without clipping is still dynamic range reduction...and can still be massive enough to warrant the term 'smashing'. No, smashing implies additional faults. To you. I'm not at all bound to use *your* private definitions of a word that has no standard technical definition. I assume those reading along understand what I mean, from what's written, if not simply from LOOKING AT those waveforms. The multichannel thing is still important. Yes, it is, but that's a totally separate feature from the purported benefits of 'high rez' sample rates. It's a handy way to increase your odds of a good mastering according to the article. But you've got a completely different mix. In addition to the stereo, which can be the original. THe stereo mix is almost always the original one. But as we see, for 'rock' releases it's often presented with a reduced dynamic range. Yes, we've come full circle. We never really left the starting point. Thanks for agreeing with my agreement. Since the topic of compressed 'high rez' releases came up, I've been pointing up the disjunction between what is advertised/assumed for 'high rez' releases, and what is actually delivered, and you've been tossing peanuts from the gallery , most of which are beside the point. No, I repeated an modest assertion from the article and you overstated your evidence. Again, you're reinterpreting history (moderators??). You wrote 'Looks like hi rez is handy way to find better masterings, according to the article". And in response I noted: "But it's not...at least for stereo DVD-A. I find as many 'modern' (as in , severaly reduced dynamic range) remasterings as there as I do 'audiophile' ones. " which post if anything UNDERSTATED my evidence , implying a 1:1 ratio of 'audiophile' to 'CD style' mastering of DVD-A . The actual evidence suggests a much higher'CD style' to 'audiophile' ratio. Given that pop music releases far outnumber classical releases on DVD-A , I'd say the evidence supports what I wrote -- which was about stereo DVD-A particularly -- rather well. I'll say it again: As far as stereo DVD-A goes, contrary to what one might reasonably assume from the hype, hi rez is NOT a particularly handy way to find better masterings than what's on CD. I definitely prefer the ELP three-channel Brain Salad Surgery. BSS's multichannel mix is mostly 5.1, except for two tracks, which IIRC are 5.0. The two-channel stereo mix is a downmix of that. There is no 'three channel' mix that I'm aware of. It's 3/2.1 channels. "Still You Turn Me On' and 'Benny the Bouncer' are 3/2. The rest are 3/2.1. None are 'three channel' (3.0). I don't have a sub. The high-rez mix must be well-done as I didn't notice any rear speaker activity, especially in comparison to the 5.1 dts mix. er...the 'high rez' and DTS surround mixes are *the same mix*, with the same number of channels. There should be no more or less rear speaker activiy in one versus the other, if your system is playing them properly. __ -S maybe they wanna rock. maybe they need to rock. Maybe it's for the money? But That's none of our business..our business as fans is to rock with them. |
Reply |
Thread Tools | |
Display Modes | |
|
|