The_Lhc
Well-known member
Al ears said:The_Lhc said:Al ears said:this is not the way to hear the differences between CD quality downloads and DSD downloads -
Given you've said this twice now, have you even grasped the point that this is not what people are talking about when they speak of comparing hi-res with CD quality (or even lower)? Even if you take two downloads, one hi-res, one standard CD res, of the same piece from the same website or vendor you have no guarantee that they are from the same master. The point is to take your hi-res download and convert it yourself to CD res and THEN compare the difference. That way you are removing the mastering from the equation. Of course you then need to do the listening in a way that doesn't allow you to know in advance which one you're listening to.
Comparing two different downloads is a waste of time.
I quite agree. However if you can prove both files can from the same master ( just how many recordings of a orchestral piece do you think they make before issuing?)
It's not a different recording, it's a different master of the same recording, with a compressed dynamic range that makes the difference. You could master one recording a dozen ways and make them all sound different if you wished (case in point the last NIN album and the remastered Band on the Run were both issued with TWO different 24-bit options, one with a compressed DR at a level the market would expect, the other with a fuller range DR to more readily reflect what was heard in the studio, complete with the proviso that if you feel it's too quiet, turn it up. Both options came from the same recording, only the mastering differed).
Using software to compress that hires file down to 16/44 is going to make it sound like a highly compressed CD, and that's not what I want to listen to.
*sigh* no, it isn't, you are confusing dynamic range compression with bitrate compression and they are not the same thing. Bear in mind the available dynamic range of a 24-bit audio file is all but unusable, it's so wide the maximum volume, if it could ever be reproduced by home audio equipment, would cause instant deafness, typically the dynamic range used in 24-bit files is comfortably within the range available in a 16-bit file. That being the case converting a 24-bit file to a 16-bit file will NEVER compress the dynamic range (in theory you could produce a 24-bit file with a DR large enough to exceed the 16-bit range but you'd never actually be able to listen to it in a sensible way.
If I am spending good money on a download I'd want the best possible quality available for that particular piece even if you are convinced I cannot hear any difference. It's the same reason I will buy an LP recorded at 45 rpm if one is available rather than 33.3.
The point is there is nothing in the 24-bit version that you are paying extraof your hard-earned money for that couldn't be provided in a 16-bit file (but deliberately isn't provided for). That's why it's a ripoff.