CDs are different to the Downloads
Posted: Sun Nov 21, 2010 12:53 pm
The CD is clearer, with better instrument separation and clarity. Louie's toms are also more clear and distinct. So far thats what I hear when I compare the two.
Then you should try FLAC instead of WAV:bakersfieldpethead wrote:I think when I can afford it I'm going to buy a couple of 3tb external Hard Drivers and re-rip all my CDs again in Wav format instead of WMA or MP3.
I don't recall getting the option to choose flac when I bought the download.Boray wrote:Then you should try FLAC instead of WAV:bakersfieldpethead wrote:I think when I can afford it I'm going to buy a couple of 3tb external Hard Drivers and re-rip all my CDs again in Wav format instead of WMA or MP3.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Free_Lossless_Audio_Codec
It compresses the data to about 75% of the original, but uses a completely undestructive compression.
(My latest songs are available in 24 bit flac by the way: http://user.tninet.se/~hlw771b/boray_music.html )
I didn't get one either, I'd have snapped that up in a hearbeat. Matter of fact I read here that I thought they were going to have a FLAC version available.rexreed wrote:I don't recall getting the option to choose flac when I bought the download.Boray wrote:Then you should try FLAC instead of WAV:bakersfieldpethead wrote:I think when I can afford it I'm going to buy a couple of 3tb external Hard Drivers and re-rip all my CDs again in Wav format instead of WMA or MP3.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Free_Lossless_Audio_Codec
It compresses the data to about 75% of the original, but uses a completely undestructive compression.
(My latest songs are available in 24 bit flac by the way: http://user.tninet.se/~hlw771b/boray_music.html )
I'll listen to a couple of files in order to compare to a Cd. But the wav format is being used in a lot of studios today. So my idea is to get as much quality as I can for a digital format.Then you should try FLAC instead of WAV:
It compresses the data to about 75% of the original, but uses a completely undestructive compression.
Sorry. If I compress in ANY format, and then open it up in ProTools next to the original wav, which is the native file format that the majority record with, and I invert the polarity of one, play them at the same time, they do not cancel out. There are still differences. ANY reduction of data is no good. If you can listen in wav, which is what the artist recorded, the wav is your best bet.Boray wrote:Then you should try FLAC instead of WAV:bakersfieldpethead wrote:I think when I can afford it I'm going to buy a couple of 3tb external Hard Drivers and re-rip all my CDs again in Wav format instead of WMA or MP3.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Free_Lossless_Audio_Codec
It compresses the data to about 75% of the original, but uses a completely undestructive compression.
(My latest songs are available in 24 bit flac by the way: http://user.tninet.se/~hlw771b/boray_music.html )
That is nonsense, Brent! Have you tried that with Flac? I just did, and... total silence! Do you believe a wav file gets worse by zipping it and unzipping it too? Then how do you think an unzipped program can run without errors?brent wrote:Sorry. If I compress in ANY format, and then open it up in ProTools next to the original wav, which is the native file format that the majority record with, and I invert the polarity of one, play them at the same time, they do not cancel out. There are still differences. ANY reduction of data is no good. If you can listen in wav, which is what the artist recorded, the wav is your best bet.Boray wrote:Then you should try FLAC instead of WAV:bakersfieldpethead wrote:I think when I can afford it I'm going to buy a couple of 3tb external Hard Drivers and re-rip all my CDs again in Wav format instead of WMA or MP3.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Free_Lossless_Audio_Codec
It compresses the data to about 75% of the original, but uses a completely undestructive compression.
(My latest songs are available in 24 bit flac by the way: http://user.tninet.se/~hlw771b/boray_music.html )