T
themaddog
Rockin' & Rollin'
Firstly, I sometimes wonder why I occasionally find myself actually defending digital down on this little forum. What? There's no need to defend. Digital everything has had massive, worldwide acceptance. Hugely successful. Sure there are some still using analog in various areas, and that's fine. Vinyl record sales have apparently been on the increase but still they are a tiny minority.
No, I do it when someone seems to, intentionally or not, misrepresent the facts.
Funny that here we are on this Analog Only www forum which if not for digital wouldnt be here!
Here we are now on Analog Only exchanging photo, video and audio clips.
Compressed digital formats BTW like jpeg, mpeg. Apparently you/we judge that the loss of quality in both audio and video is an acceptable trade off compared to not sharing them at all. Good. So does most people. I use YouTube not because of its quality but its accessibility and the vast range of stuff available.
You maintain mp3's have been a "dramatic step back in terms of sound quality". Well in one sense yes but even with wav. too you could always record at lower bit and sample rates to cut file size, with a trade off in sound quality. Do we need hi fi stereo phone lines? Of course not. The phone service always traded off sound quality so we could have the service and at least talk to each other.
And it's not as if we started with some poor quality mp3 file and were hoping for an improved CD quality file down the track to supplant it. Our first consumer experience of digital audio was CD's. mp3's came along later as an efficient file size saving method.
Even so, it's dangerous to generalize about the audio quality of mp3's or similar audio compression codecs. There is no one standard of mp3 file compression, just as there's no one analog tape format, tape speed, track width. You cut your cloth according to your audio quality needs.
For much popular music, mp3's at a reasonably high bitrate are not a compromise in sound quality. Reason? Much popular music has narrow dynamic range and so little or no information at the deeper bit levels. So if you compress correctly you are only eliminating bits that are not even recorded on in the CD format or higher. They were blank all along, or at the least contained only noise that is irrelevent to the performance itself.
If you're a kid listening to an iPod on a noisy bus or train the last thing you need is a huge dynamic range anyway. All the quiet stuff that you might hear in a quiet living room is likely overwhelmed by the vehicle noise. You want the opposite. A narrower dynamic range to hear the quieter stuff above the vehicle noise while the louder sections of the track still dont blow your brains out.
The problem can come though when people take a standard CD with a big dynamic range, simply file compress it to a low bitrate and then wonder why the quiet sounds disappear. Of course they disappear because you told the codec to eliminate all sound below a certain threshold. It's just doing what it was told to do. Again, lack of understanding.
This in itself is not an analog vs digital issue. It's just a practical human hearing issue.
Any way, enuff from me for the moment.
Cheers Tim
I understand about this trade-off and tried to detail my feelings on that in my post. MP3's are great for what they are, but now they are the preferred "medium" (as an MP3 is really just a file that is stored on many unique kinds of physical medium). This is where I see certain drawbacks, and where I see music taking a few steps backwards in terms of audio quality. I know you write that most people can't hear the difference with the right kind of compression, but I think today, even with the best variable bit rate compression, the cymbals still sound like crap. As "mediumless" music becomes more or more mainstream, I believe recordings will become even more disposable, without the option of purchasing a CD for superior quality over an MP3.
On an optimistic note, the quality of MP3's, or whatever the next hip file format happens to be, should certainly improve with time.
My studio has both an analog recorder and a digital recorder. I like digital for what it is: cheap and quick. I do my demos on digital now, since I'm doing the whole one man band thing, and if there's a really good take that I wanted to keep, I could record to tape. But, when it comes to mixing, I'm much more comfortable and confident in getting things to sound as I want them to on my tape machine through my console. When it comes to mixing in the box, although the computer mixes everything consistently each time, I can't achieve the same quality I feel that I can on my mixer; I just don't have the patience. I haven't had the opportunity to work on a DAW that operates more like a tape machine (standalone multitrack hard drive like a RADAR or an Alessis Hard Drive ADAT), and who knows, maybe if I did, I'd be won over.
-MD