Samson
what appeals to me is the good sense of his [Mitcho] commentary that's grounded in the practicalities of applied science.Regarding high resolution audio he [Mitcho] offers the benefit of his work experience by way of commentary here:
http://www.computeraudiophile.com/blogs/mitchco/criteria-eval-sq-high-res-masters-181/
Yes I agree he makes a lot of sense and comes to the same conclusion as I do but from our different backgrounds.Some crazy engineers in the 1980's butchered the audio file thinking it should technically sound better...you know, if some number/s say it should. Audiophiles listened and resoundingly said "Wow "digital" sounds like sh*t comapared to my beloved vinyl". Of course there were lots of possibilities to explain this but I bet this butchering was one. Importantly Mitcho was not only a sound engineer but used his ears and said this engineering treatment sounds woeful.The loudness trap to me was, as said, a wholesale buthering of the audio track.Technically they destroyed the dynamics of the track by artificially bringing up the volume of the softer sounds.This is neither compression (squashing both ends) nor expansion (stretching both ends) but an internal butchering messing with both macrodynamics and microdynamics.
As to whether a DR analyzer can accurately reflect this I have my doubts.Maybe it can flag the track as being suspect.But again all you have to do is listen, one sounds great one sounds like doo doo (crap) !. Now all you have to do is define doo doo as a character or descriptor of the sound. Audiophiles might say things like it sounds flat (adynamic, but this begs the conclusion that it is assoc with a measurable quantity), canned, squeezed, and other descriptors.This is similar to many perceptual areas where developing or learning a vocabulary starts to train the actual perceptual acuity.
A sommelier might say this white wine tastes "crisp" and "lively".As a novice wine taster it is a strange description but then you start to taste similar characters in other wines and start to even look for them, you become more discerning.You begin to train your palate.Of course it could be subjective nonsense but then you would have to say millions of people suffer the same delusion.Then you are told this wine has a high acidity,low pH number.Someone then connects the dots between acidity and "crispness,liveliness". Caution I say. Maybe it does ,maybe it doesn’t.
and then some audio science:
http://www.computeraudiophile.com/blogs/mitchco/16-44-vs-24-192-experiment-163/
So, this last post offers some audio science to support your opening post that high res audio is "a croc, well mostly".
Yes I have seen these before including the referenced article as to why 24/192 is
worse due to intermodulation distortion ie a measurement, a number. With respect to Mitcho the "diffmaker" is also based on a measurement, but in this case in support of there being no difference (I think, I havent read it all properly yet).Mitcho does howver say, and where this concurs with my views totally….
"While it may not be possible to show whether alteration is having effects directly on the listener, it is possible to determine whether an audio signal has been changed."
I agree with you it is tempting to support subjective judgements with such audio science but keeping things in perspective, IMO they are guides only, not definitive proof as some would have you believe.
Like I said before, I am all for trying to make meaningful correlations of the physical stimulus to how we perceive that experience. It means we can manipulate the stimulus to hopefully get a desired affect or eliminate an undesirable affect. But lets not throw the baby out with the bath water by replacing perceptual skills with numbers to judge a musical experience. Yes I know numbers are 'neater'. Like Steve Martin said in one of his movies, "Life is so messy, I hate messy !
What makes sense to me is that the highest sampling rate and bit depth in the world can't make up for excessive compression, other poor mastering techniques, a dud microphone or audio pickup, shortcomings in the studio building design, artist playing skill or how the artists are feeling when they lay down a track. It's a holistic system that will be brought down by the weakest link.
Hallelujah, brother, I pray at your altar …. And no I'm not a religious man .." I swear there aint no heaven but I pray there aint no hell". BTW have a listen to the original recording of "And When I Die" by Blood,sweat and tears (they use that lyric in the song) , what a knock-out for the time !
I've yet to investigate the site offered by kstuart to use my ears to decide but I suspect that I'll struggle to tell the difference. mitchco points out that hearing acuity is lost with age, so I'm not going to have the ears that I had 10 years ago.
I have, see my post here.
Re your listening acuity dropping with age. We are still talking numbers again,lol, arent we !? Look I certainly do believe hearing deteriorates with age for most of us. But just to give a different slant on it I repeat below my post from somewhere else…
Yes we all know music can be enjoyable even in a truncated narrow frequency range but can you hear stuff thats not there..., huh?! I believe the physical measurement is only one part of the perceptual equation. It is likely people learn to perceive frequencies that they cant literally hear.... abit like Beethoven composing music when deaf. If you hear the lower harmonics of a note it is not outrageous to consider the possibility that the brain extrapolates to "hear" what it thinks it should.After all you dont need to have a left foot to feel a left foot....maybe you have heard of phantom pain? With music it may well be that this works only with familiar music ie where the brain has a strong memory of the sound/music. The brain is an amazing place,people with strokes that cant utter a word can sometimes sing clearly.people can be born without, or aquire the inability, to not recognize human faces.Although neurologically completely differnent concepts to hearing stuff, the brain can be a strange and mysterious place. (crazy idea from a medical specialist in neurolgy,neuropsycholgy and rehabilitation)
Pasted from <http://yabb.jriver.com/interact/index.php?topic=77190.0>
I would point out further that if an individual has satisfied themselves that a tool like the dynamic range meter matches their listening preferences, so that they believe there's a good correlation with what they hear and what the meter tells them, then that's all they need for a useful tool. I think this aligns with some of your comments.
Yes it does but I just question what you are using the tool for? Is it to select good quality music? If so, why not just listen. Where I see the utility of such a tool is in changing the audio engineering practices. In other words if you fiddle with parameter x like the tool tells us, lets have a listen and see if the tool got it right. Specifically if we like dynamic range then increasing this in the mastering process should mean we like it more , right? My gut is screaming, "dude, leave that knob alone. Step slowly away from that console and I'll put the gun down !"
I'll have to re-read your posts to be sure. Your language is not psycho-babble but it's certainly technical in areas outside my familiarity, so it takes some effort.
Im so sorry,this is my fault. I hate people that explain things in terms of other things which in themselves need to be defined.I am more than happy to clarify what I have said.One of the problems is typing as it flows out of my brain unlike a published article I would read and proof multiple times.
It may be self delusion but if the individual finds a tool useful, then they won't care whether it should or shouldn't work. The tool works for them. You could always test out the dynamic range meter results and see what you think.
I'll give it a go coz I respect you opinion and honesty