|
||
|
|
|||||||
| Welcome to the Exploding Garrmondo Weiner Interactive Swiss Army Penis. |
|
GFF is a community of gaming and music enthusiasts. We have a team of dedicated moderators, constant member-organized activities, and plenty of custom features, including our unique journal system. If this is your first visit, be sure to check out the FAQ or our GFWiki. You will have to register before you can post. Membership is completely free (and gets rid of the pesky advertisement unit underneath this message).
|
| View Poll Results: Are you an audiophile? | |||
| Yes |
|
96 | 55.17% |
| No |
|
78 | 44.83% |
| Voters: 174. You may not vote on this poll | |||
![]() |
|
|
Thread Tools |
![]() What, you don't want my bikini-clad body? |
As for your system, what kind of headphones? Amplifier? Source? Cables? (If any, personally, I am not a believer in cables.) How ya doing, buddy? |
![]()
Most amazing jew boots |
You call that a nice pair of headphones? My nice pair of headphones cost $300! They are an incredibly high-quality product, with a very smooth, even frequency response, very little harmonic distortion, and a very high build quality to boot. I find it even more suspect that you could tell apart high-quality mp3s and lossless files on a pair of low-end phones like that.
If you're a serious audiophile, you should at least upgrade to a pair of Grado SR-60s. You will not regret it. This thing is sticky, and I don't like it. I don't appreciate it. |
Ha! Well I'm still an audiophile, just a broke audiophile.
![]() I am a dolphin, do you want me on your body? |
I suppose I am sort of an audiophile. I take speakers and earphones quite seriously and have all my music encoded with the minimum at least being 192. Haven't gone into FLAC yet mainly due to lack of space and download quotas lol.
Used to be content with 192s but recently have stepped up my game to only be satisfied with at least V0 rips. Honestly I am able to tell the difference between the qualities, but not significantly enough to declare with absolute confidence. How ya doing, buddy? ![]() |
I'm partialy, Because I can't stand quality below 192, and even 192 I bitch, If I can choose, it's always 256 or 320, But I don't care to the point of making a holy quest for better quality, If only find in 128, so be it.
What kind of toxic man-thing is happening now? ![]() |
I think I might have put my opinion in this thread before a loooong time ago. But for me, it comes down to perceptive quality, and for that I'm very picky. At the same time, I want small file sizes. So for me, I want the best of both worlds.
I took a few days of really analyzing 320CBR, WAV, and various VBR MP3 settings to find the maximum that I could compress without hearing a difference. Used RazorLame and Lame 3.97b2 with its highly adaptive VBR to come up with these settings Code:
-m j -h -V4 --vbr-new The great thing about the VBR is, I get a file size comparable to 160CBR with a quality FAR superior. FELIPE NO ~ Ready To Strike ~ :Currently Playing: League Of Legends(PC), Skyrim(PC), Golden Sun: Lost Age(GBA), Twilight Princess(Wii), Portal2(PC), Dragon Warrior II(NES), Metroid Prime 2: Echoes(GC)
|
I guess I'll keep it resurrected with my answer..
Audiophile? Not really, by most standards. I'm not really a fan of having randoms blips and crackles in my music, but it's gotta be pretty damn intrusive to make me find another version, re-name it to my IPod convention, connect my IPod, delete the old file off of it, etc...hassles have to be worth it. As long as I can discern the melody,harmony, etc.., it's easy to filter out any technical shortcomings in your head anyway. What, you don't want my bikini-clad body?
Music is a mysterious thing. Sometimes it makes people remember things they do not expect. Many thoughts, feelings, memories... things almost forgotten... Regardless of whether the listener desires to remember or not.
|
I converted to one sometime around last summer. A Sibelius recording finally did me in.
Jam it back in, in the dark. |
In the past i was not really an audiophile because i would always listen to 192kbps stuff most of the time. Now that i have gotten into VGM msuic all my rips and CD rips that i download or do have been lossless or 320kbps.
There's nowhere I can't reach. |
Can someone hear the difference between ogg and mp3 (320 kb/s)?
How ya doing, buddy? |
At high quality levels, almost certainly not.
I am a dolphin, do you want me on your body? |
I'll cringe at the sound of anything below 160kbps MP3s. Anything above that, I seriously do not hear the difference. I only have a crappy Soundblaster hooked to a 100 bucks Logitech sound system though, but I'm more than happy with it.
I download a lot of lossless music but convert everything to Lame APX MP3s. I was speaking idiomatically. |
![]() if i want to continue this hobby, i must move into a better room with better acoustics... i can never go back to listening with "multimedia / computer speakers".... they make my ears bleed ![]() How ya doing, buddy? |
Being an audiophile is too much of a hassle. But I think there's nothing wrong with being one. I think I'm halfway being and audiophile but nowhere really close to being one. I have crappy speakers, but I usually have VBRs and 192-320kbps mp3s. I'm thinking of purchasing one of those Altecs but I don't have enough money.
FELIPE NO |
I think it's safe to say this guy is an audiophile.
The World's Greatest Music Collection - eBay (item 140206309501 end time Feb-21-08 06:00:00 PST)
How ya doing, buddy?
...
|
I have a decent set of speakers, a decent pair of headphones, and though I can detect a very slight difference between, say, 192 and 256/320 kbps, I don't hear it unless I'm intentionally looking for it. It doesn't bother me, so the majority of my music collection is in 192. I don't have the disk space, nor do I plan on spending the money to have the space, for anything else anytime soon.
One thing that DOES bother me? Bose. Bose is so ridiculously overrated and overpriced. All-digital sound is like crap to a musician's ears. Give me all analog, or mixed digital-analog audio, but never ever subject me to pure digital sound. I hate it. Jam it back in, in the dark. ![]() |
What the fuck are you even talking about, Ayos?
Bose do suck, but its because their stuff is incredibly overpriced. "all digital sound" ... Please start making sense. Either that or shut the fuck up. There's nowhere I can't reach. ![]() |
Well, despite the name... I'm actually not as bad as some. There are some that have a fixation with the proper room design for heightened acoustics, and 24k gold plated connectors, and so on. At that point, though, it's really become more about the waveform and equipment than the emotional impact music has, which is of far greater value to me. However, if I can manage, I do like to have everything in at least preset standard, but if I can't get it except in something less, I'll still take it for the music.
This thing is sticky, and I don't like it. I don't appreciate it. |
Analog sound vs. digital sound That, especially the brief sections about "analog warmth" will give you an idea. Sure, most music these days is stored in a digital format. That's fine, but there's still a distinct difference between playing it through separate types of audio systems. Bose, for instance, has all sorts of digital "enhancements" that drain the sound even more of the "analog warmth" for the sake of making it "cleaner" and louder, even out of small speakers. Bose's initial point of pride, when I first saw their commercials, was "all-digital sound" for crying out loud. Hell even playing music, whether mixed with live aspects or not, through an analog sound board presented a huge difference. The guy who built the thing from the ground up sat and talked with me for hours about the difference between analog and digital sound. Six professional musicians I was working with commented on it the moment we set it up and started running CDs through it. Are you seriously going to sit there and tell me there's no such thing? Don't be daft. I am a dolphin, do you want me on your body? ![]() |
I don't get it, looks like you are in favor of analog stuff, however (taking the same article you posted), we can find this:
Anyways, I have read several sounds engineers/musicians talking about this subject and they usually come the same conclusion, here for example: The Audio Critic Btw, Didn't want to sound "meanie", but it came out that way.... sorry. Most amazing jew boots |
Oh, I totally agree that it's all very subjective. Not surprising, considering what we're talking about. I'm not even saying that analog is better than digital. I just LIKE IT better. I don't think digital is vastly inferior to analog in any way. I just love the sound of analog, the "emotion" and "warmth" of it. Ergo, I hate Bose, because they've done even more to eliminate that. In the strictest sense, digital is "better" especially to audiophiles, which is part of why I voted no. I'm definitely not an audiophile. I love high-quality, clean, clear audio, but I'll take an old LP of Ray Charles over an iTunes digital release of the same music any day.
What kind of toxic man-thing is happening now? ![]() |
From a technical perspective, digital is far superior to analog, (if "analog" in this context is refers to vinyl records). The available dynamic range is greater, there is no hiss, no rumble, and no crackle. The medium does not degrade with use. The so-called "warmth" of vinyl records is a form of distortion. It may sound good, yes, but it isn't realistic.
As for the redbook audio format itself, there is nothing wrong with it. There is no reason to believe a properly recorded, mixed, and mastered CD will sound worse or somehow contain less musical information than a record. 44,100 samples per second at 16 bits per sample is more than enough. Enough to reproduce frequencies up to 22kHz with nearly 100db of dynamic range. CDs today are often mastered poorly, which leads many to the conclusion that the problem is with the format itself, which is untrue. Records often receive much more gentle treatment in post processing. "All-digital" sound is nothing more than a selling point that companies that sell audio equipment use to convince people to purchase their products. It has no real meaning. What is "all-digital" anyway? Such a thing is impossible! Eventually, the sampled digital waveform will have to be sent to a DAC in order to be converted into an analog electrical signal, otherwise there would be no way to play it through speakers or headphones. FELIPE NO |
What, you don't want my bikini-clad body? |
![]() |
|
Similar Threads
|
||||
| Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
| Audiophile heaven | KeyLogic | General Game Music Discussion | 1 | Aug 13, 2007 05:31 AM |