When HI-RES AUDIO stops making sense...

Sdílet
Vložit
  • čas přidán 27. 08. 2023
  • This video is brought to you by Primare:
    primare.net/
    🎥 Camera: John Darko
    🎬 Editor: John Darko
    🌈 Colour: Olaf von Voss
    🕺🏻 Motion GFX: John Darko
    💰 Ad segment: Jana Dagdagan
    🎵 Song IDs? Playlists of all music heard in this video - and other videos - can be found on PATREON: / johndarko
    👉 As mentioned in this video...
    Talking Heads - Stop Making Sense
    🛒 amzn.to/3sB4QKV
    Stop Making Sense 2023 movie trailer
    📺 • Talking Heads - Stop M...
    DR Loudness database
    📖 dr.loudness-war.info/
    The Loudness Wars: Why Music Sounds Worse
    📖 www.npr.org/2009/12/31/122114...
    Sony PCM-3324 (as used to record SMS's sound digitally)
    📖 www.sony.net/Products/proaudi...
    Streaming platform by Roon
    🛒 roon.link/affiliate/darko
    Cables and power products by AudioQuest
    🛒 howl.me/ckbW8ZBoZAg
    Hi-fi furniture and speaker stands by Solid Steel
    🛒 howl.me/ckbW9947Hdi
    Room treatment by Vicoustic
    📖 vicoustic.com/
    Darko.Audio may earn a small commission from items purchased via affiliate links, which are indicated with a '🛒'.
    #remaster #hiresaudio #hifi
    __________________________________________________________________
    📖 PLEASE READ *before commenting*!
    1) Polite comments that advance the conversation are most welcome
    2) No URLs, racist/sexist remarks or conspiracy theories
    3) All comments here are moderated by a third party
    __________________________________________________________________
    ⏰ How our CZcams videos get made:
    darko.audio/2021/10/how-our-y...
    Darko.Audio FAQ:
    darko.audio/faq/
    Why are/were comments turned OFF?
    darko.audio/2020/10/why-im-sw...
    What the bloody hell am I talking about?
    • What the bloody hell a...
    How is Darko.Audio funded?
    darko.audio/funding/
    __________________________________________________________________
    🎧 Check out the Darko.Audio podcast:
    podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast...
    open.spotify.com/show/1mnKixp...
    / johnhdarko
    __________________________________________________________________
    Web: Darko.Audio
    Instagram: / darkoaudio
  • Zábava

Komentáře • 607

  • @xentakis
    @xentakis Před 8 měsíci +25

    And you may ask yourself: “What is the dynamic range like?”

    • @fukyougoogle2137
      @fukyougoogle2137 Před 8 měsíci +3

      I see what you did there...

    • @georgebarronjr
      @georgebarronjr Před 8 měsíci +1

      DR is the current elephant in the room and 800 pound gorilla. When overly compressed it ruins everything regardless of production, engineering, format or hi-fi system.

  • @bitterandjaded_
    @bitterandjaded_ Před 8 měsíci +50

    As someone that remembers listening to Talking Heads on cassette, with the headphones that came with my Walkman, while mowing the lawn, pretty much everything sounds better now.

    • @mrtim6
      @mrtim6 Před 8 měsíci +7

      If you had have listened without mowing the lawn pretty much everything would have sounded better then too

    • @asherfilms923
      @asherfilms923 Před 8 měsíci +3

      If you're nostalgic for that time, check out the koss KPH 40. They may look cheap but they sit right next to my $300 headphones, Plus they scale well on amplifiers.

    • @neilp192
      @neilp192 Před 8 měsíci +2

      I've got a copy of TNOTBITH on cassette and it sounds incredible. Actually my favorite TH album.

    • @skaushi3886
      @skaushi3886 Před 8 měsíci

      @@asherfilms923 I second your opinion . Koss kph30i sound bloody good. They teleport me back to 90s. I was forever hunting for “THAT “ sound and have various mid-fi (read below $500) cans and none sound as engaging and musical as these do

  • @mrsharps
    @mrsharps Před 8 měsíci +77

    I feel like this is the definitive case study on why vinyl or bit rate alone will not guarantee the best audio quality. Bravo!

    • @eespinosa64
      @eespinosa64 Před 8 měsíci +2

      Au contraire...😂

    • @EricRhodeslives
      @EricRhodeslives Před 8 měsíci +1

      @@eespinosa64 🤣

    • @Godbluffer
      @Godbluffer Před 8 měsíci +6

      It’s a bizarre history. One of CD’s selling points upon introduction was its greater dynamic range. Then the loudness wars started, and this was completely forgotten. Then after that, the vinyl revival started, but still as a bit of a niche product for those with refined tastes, and guess what? The *less* dynamically compressed masterings were now relegated to vinyl. So I’m actually curious what the DR rating of this album’s vinyl version is, because of this one is just as compressed as the new digital versions, we will be able to conclude that vinyl is fully back in the mainstream again. 😝

    • @jerryscanas
      @jerryscanas Před 8 měsíci +2

      It's hardware that's gonna get you the desired result, forget the formats it's all in the hardware...

    • @jamesstanley7263
      @jamesstanley7263 Před 8 měsíci +5

      @@jerryscanassomeone didn’t watch the video 🙄

  • @pixelmixture3067
    @pixelmixture3067 Před 8 měsíci +25

    This loudness war is a plague … fueled by the adoption of crappy Bluetooth mono speakers and crappy in ear headphones …

  • @gotham61
    @gotham61 Před 8 měsíci +13

    The elephant in the room that wasn’t mentioned is that the original mix was from a Sony PCM-3324 DASH recorder, which has a maximum resolution of 48k 16bit. Any version claiming higher resolution than that has been upsampled

    • @ksbav8r
      @ksbav8r Před 8 měsíci

      Exactly 👏 exactly 👏 exactly 👏 thank you. Came here to say just this.

  • @gavinhall4112
    @gavinhall4112 Před 8 měsíci +7

    It should be pointed out that a track being "high dynamic range" is not necessarily a universal good. It's great in a quiet listening environment, but in a car or a bus, you end up turning up the volume to hear the quiet sections, and then get your head blown off by the loud sections. It's almost like there need to be separate masters, labeled as such, depending on the use case.

  • @AllboroLCD
    @AllboroLCD Před 8 měsíci +3

    HUGE thing to also note is that Talking Heads have had quite the good track record as far as new mixes on new formats go, more so than most artists. The surround mixes are superb!

  • @darrylbrueckner2812
    @darrylbrueckner2812 Před 8 měsíci +8

    My older brother and his friend rented Stop Making Sense on VHS back in 1987. They were cool enuff to let me watch with them. My 14 yr old brain was blown away. I remember hopping on the bus and buying Fear of Music and Speaking in Tongues on LP later that week. I still have them. What a trip to discover and work through Talking Heads' catalogue at that age. Life-long fan ever since.

  • @legrandmaitre7112
    @legrandmaitre7112 Před 8 měsíci +4

    As I've said before, it's not about the format, it's about the music.
    In my case I have many LPs which never came out on CD - and now in 2023 I have many CDs that aren't available on LP.
    I think loudness wars did enormous damage to the CD format's reputation.
    At my age I have a pretty big collection, and for music that I really love I usually have several CD editions, often the LP as well. For me, in pretty well 90% of cases, it's the pre-loudness war CDs which come out on top and get played the most.
    In recent years, I've kind of developed a new hifi mentality - that my system is there to "serve my collection". As I can't have all the music I love in perfect sound then I need that can handle just about everything.

  • @syanhc
    @syanhc Před 8 měsíci +8

    As a recording artist and studio producer, I enjoyed this quite a lot. Compression is a tool to be used delicately. It is necessary to balance dynamics between sole tracks so that they balance each other in the mix. But overall dynamic range compression can be a terrible thing if done without sensitivity. It's a testament to the engineers that recorded it and later mastered it that a live recording back in the 80s was recorded so well. Because it's usually live recordings that suffer badly under the compression tool as a producer tries to account for live variables. Anyway, it's great to watch that live Blu-ray. We forget how brilliant and innovative Talking Heads were. My fav band... Prince's Sign of the Times. Another brilliant live concert movie....❤

  • @Phil_f8andbethere
    @Phil_f8andbethere Před 8 měsíci +8

    I try to avoid re-masters if possible, as it's as you say, a fancy way of saying "made louder". The best sounding CDs are generally the ones made in the 80s and early 90's, after that it's pot luck on how good a job they have done. It's why vinyl often sounds better than CD, because they have to master it differently so it works on vinyl. Great video JD. Music first, mastering second, format last.

    • @yobgol
      @yobgol Před 8 měsíci

      ... and aren't lots of modern vinyl pressings done from masters produced for CDs in years gone by? that's what i've often heard and read.

    • @andrewbrazier9664
      @andrewbrazier9664 Před 8 měsíci

      @@yobgolI understand this is because the original analogue oxide tape masters are in such poor condition.

  • @AndyP126
    @AndyP126 Před 8 měsíci +7

    People really underestimate dynamic range. That's why I hunt old unremastered CD.

  • @mwalker2496
    @mwalker2496 Před 8 měsíci +4

    John - this is the most IMPORTANT and REVELATORY video you've ever made!
    I couldn't understand why my original CD's sounded better than my supposed new 'Remastered' CD's and Hi Rez file downloads. It's like when we were duped into believing that digital was always better than analog in the '80's.
    I'm off to buy up all the cheap, original early NON remastered CD versions!

    • @1998mchp
      @1998mchp Před 8 měsíci

      Yep. Will be Rosetta Stones of playback never to be heard via streamingm and without vinyl pink noise and mastering format constraints. Good luck finding them mind.

  • @richh650
    @richh650 Před 8 měsíci +6

    Excellent discussion! There are very few remasters that are better than the original as most modern sound engineers appear to be idiots now.

  • @skaushi3886
    @skaushi3886 Před 8 měsíci +1

    excellent !
    my friends made me believe that “ THAT SOUND” you are not able to find in new hi res music is purely nostalgia , but I was convinced that my CDs from early 90s actually sounded better

  • @tidysampler585
    @tidysampler585 Před 8 měsíci +3

    I remember the day I first got my hands on Sony’s Minidisc. Handheld & automotive derived. That was a step up from ordinary CD’s in the late 90’s. Then i heard an SA-CD in a local hi-fi shop.
    Damn that was like hearing the instruments live in your ear..
    Great episode 👍

    • @andrewbrazier9664
      @andrewbrazier9664 Před 8 měsíci

      Sad that SACD was never adopted as the new industry standard from CDs like DVD to Blu Ray was 🙁
      Those SACDs that were released were always sold as luxury products requiring very expensive niche market players 🙄

  • @ChristosTsitselis
    @ChristosTsitselis Před 8 měsíci +4

    After this video I am considering to create 1000 accounts to subscribe again with each one of them. Your Channel and work is like an oasis inside the hottest desert. Thanks for this darko. Kudos from Athens Greece

  • @jamesdwright
    @jamesdwright Před 8 měsíci +5

    We need more videos like this John. A fascinating discussion on the merits of good mastering vs, bit rate and audio format. The more people realise this the sooner we can move away from remastered dynamically compressed releases.

    • @rusedgin
      @rusedgin Před 8 měsíci +1

      You know, modern sound engineers must deeply consider the way people listen to music. Mono playback on cell phones and Bluetooth speakers adds the risk of phase cancellation which can compromise audio quality. Of course, this is not an excuse for poor audio mastering on a vinyl record.

    • @BERTVVANHORCK
      @BERTVVANHORCK Před 8 měsíci

      Perhaps a blind audition of the same song from this album and see who can distinguish the different compression rates. In the end more than 90% is still decided by the music.

  • @rwilifeandtravel1854
    @rwilifeandtravel1854 Před 8 měsíci +2

    Great video. With all the technical advancements I hoped that the loudness wars would be well and truly over by now. At the very least there could be two versions: the highly compressed version and what I call the musical version.

  • @markstradling
    @markstradling Před 8 měsíci +5

    Roon also analyses dynamic range and can display this information for each album, so no need for additional software or expense

    • @carpetcrawler79
      @carpetcrawler79 Před 8 měsíci

      Roons display of dynamic range is crap. They use the wrong algorythm.

  • @beachroadfilms
    @beachroadfilms Před 8 měsíci +3

    Great article. Please do more like this. I ripped the Blue ray using "DVD Audio Extractor" and measure a DR of 14 on my 24 bit rip, not the 13 you mention.

  • @Dan-Null
    @Dan-Null Před 8 měsíci +2

    I have the Blu ray and it is one of my best sounding concert Blu rays. Possibly the best. Pink floyds delicate sound of thunder is pretty high up there too

  • @SmallChurch
    @SmallChurch Před 8 měsíci +5

    Perfect, John. You nailed it. 'Brick-Walled' digitally mastered recordings that are massively compressed have been, sadly, ubiquitous for a good number of years now. I'm a 40-yr. plus audio engineer/musician/producer and will always go for the original 'red book' mastered CD, as I'm less likely to get an album that comes up, when analyzed, as almost a complete black audio wave graph w/ the very occasional 'peak' which usually ends up being untethered sibilance. (Same goes for the vinyl version - give me, in most instances - the first pressing w/ original mastering).

  • @jjgk228
    @jjgk228 Před 8 měsíci +2

    Paul from PS Audio discussed this same topic in his video today...very helpful!!

  • @cxf1172
    @cxf1172 Před 8 měsíci +2

    In 1983, I was the Production Coordinator for a Mattel commercial being filmed at Hollywood Center Studios' lot. (formerly Coppola's old Zoetrope Studios) The Director of the commercial was Jordan Cronenweth who was also the DP. At that point Jordan was best known as the DP for the pivotal Blade Runner movie. Early afternoon of each day, we would wrap for the day and run over to the Pantages to join the other cameramen, Grips and Gaffers who had been prelighting all day in anticipation of that night's performance which was shot for the three nights. Being on that stage with Demme, Jordan and Byrne who was a part of the visuals and creative, was one of the highlights of my career. Being a huge talking Heads fan, I had already purchased tickets for two of the three shows. Being in the audience to see those shows after a couple of pops at the nearby Frolic room was sublime. Looking forward to buying the new 4k, Dolby Atmos DVD.

  • @rogerglaubitz5710
    @rogerglaubitz5710 Před 8 měsíci +3

    Hi John, your videos are always great, but this one was outstanding! Please more of these!

  • @siraly
    @siraly Před 8 měsíci +1

    Thank you so much for clarifying on the most important aspect of sound quality!

  • @brianmcnamara1431
    @brianmcnamara1431 Před 8 měsíci

    This is my favorite video of yours to date. Bravo on comparing the music recordings instead of component review. Love it!

  • @TriAmpHiFi
    @TriAmpHiFi Před 8 měsíci +2

    Outstanding. Mature foundational audiophile knowledge. Thanks.
    Reggae, Funk & Brass 🔈🔉🔊

  • @mattwhite532
    @mattwhite532 Před 8 měsíci

    I gotta hand it to ya man. I'm not always into some of the equipment you reviw; but, gosh darnit, it's videos like these that keep me coming back for more. In a hot and stuffy room, you are the rush of cool, fresh air that comes through when I feel like I'm about to pass out. Thanks to you and your team for all the work you put in on these vids! Always appreciate them!

  • @expluizig
    @expluizig Před 8 měsíci

    Not only my favourite music/movie but also great technical content - perhaps my favourite video so far!

  • @photogcw
    @photogcw Před 8 měsíci +1

    Kudos to you! I think this is one of your best segments.

  • @neilshirley
    @neilshirley Před 8 měsíci +1

    What a great video. Really enjoyed watching this and the journey and explanation of this album.

  • @michaelrossmaessler200
    @michaelrossmaessler200 Před 8 měsíci +2

    Excellent video John. This one really made me think as well as being informative. 🙂

  • @davidwho7847
    @davidwho7847 Před 8 měsíci

    Great explanation! Thank you, John.

  • @normanmorrow4897
    @normanmorrow4897 Před 8 měsíci

    A truly great vid as always. A new insight into one of my all time fav albums.

  • @TheMirolab
    @TheMirolab Před 8 měsíci +4

    Yes, yes, YES!! I’ve been proclaiming this for years, that it’s not the format, but the mastering that you are really hearing. Compression does bring forth more details, like a magnifying glass, but at a great loss of dynamics and is fatiguing. Sadly I have SACDs where the audio wavetops are flatlined and audibly distorted. It’s a crime that I cannot get my money back on what is a clearly defective hi-res product. I love this episode! I only wish you had recorded the vinyl and measured the DR.

    • @1998mchp
      @1998mchp Před 8 měsíci

      Depeche Mode Sacd's. Dynamically destroyed mid 2000s horror shows. A QED.

  • @mikedavid6681
    @mikedavid6681 Před 8 měsíci +2

    I seen stop making sense in the theatre 1984 in a small rural town. It was electric, the projectionist turned the movie off at one point and lectured everyone to sit down and stop dancing

  • @GeneSavage
    @GeneSavage Před 8 měsíci +2

    THANK YOU!!! Garbage in = garbage out.
    The only other thing I'd mention, that will drive you crazy, is that sometimes you can have a recording that shows greater dynamic range not because it is less compressed but because it's been messed with, maybe resampled or high or low pass filtered or something else, which has caused what are called "overshoots." They don't improve the actual dynamics, they just push the average volume of everything down because of these very transient spikes.
    These often are coming from copies of copies of master tapes... meaning that it may register as greater dynamic range, but have more tape hiss.
    ...Then again, NO tape hiss may indicate aggressive noise reduction has been used, which can dull the highs...
    I love this hobby, and I hate it, all at the same time. I wish record labels would release absolutely flat dumps of their master tapes and let US choose to "remaster" them ourselves if we wanted.

  • @neekondrums
    @neekondrums Před 8 měsíci

    Thank you for having the knowledge and skill to understand this stuff and taking the time to put it into words. I have been listening to music for over 40 years, but I could never explain to my friends why some older "inferior" recordings sounded better to me the "superior" new remastered ones. I could describe the loudness wars to some degree, but I didn't have any numbers to "show" people what I thought I was hearing. A big example that I know well is the difference between a cassette recording I made for myself from Rush's _Grace Under Pressure Tour_ stereo VHS release (released in 1986) vs. the remastered official CD version (released in 2006). The newer version, although cleaner, has too much low end in addition to just the compressed dynamic range. Best way for me to describe what I'm hearing is to say it sounds like, at the time of remastering, they tried as hard as they could to try to make Geddy's 1980s Steinberger bass sound like his 2005 Fender Jazz bass. Same effect on the drums, too, in that they sound more like DW drums than Tama drums -- all tone and no attack. They're kind of tubby and lack the growl I expect.
    Anyway, thank you again. I'll be using the DR Loudness database to inform my future music purchases.

  • @user-js6vb2dx6q
    @user-js6vb2dx6q Před 8 měsíci +3

    Amazingly informative. I love this album and cherish my original CD

  • @keosoft
    @keosoft Před 8 měsíci

    Thank you for illustrating dinamic range differences of different cd/vinil versions on my FAVOURITE album!

  • @jefffan171
    @jefffan171 Před 8 měsíci +2

    I normally always give a thumb button for your videos John. But just had to slam the button for the mention/nod to good old VHS and the absolute legend that was Laserdisc! Love that format

  • @user-xc6dc6bb1d
    @user-xc6dc6bb1d Před 8 měsíci +4

    I think you only have to look at how the vast majority of people consume music today.
    Either cheap ear buds, car stereos or Bluetooth speakers. If music was not heavily compressed, then it would not work well on these devices as they can’t reproduce the full dynamic range.
    The Bluray of the film is most probably going to be played on a sound system that has decent speakers and probably as sub, so will benefit for a higher range.
    Who knows maybe one day in the future we can have variable dynamic range to optimise to our listening equipment and environment.

    • @andrewbrazier9664
      @andrewbrazier9664 Před 8 měsíci

      Very true. Although pop music singles are all about shifting units on what ever format.
      Streaming has compounded that ability for top selling artists at the expense of less commercial yet more creative ones 🙁

  • @merrillaldrich9170
    @merrillaldrich9170 Před 8 měsíci +2

    Great video and reminder - I agree 100%. Recording and mastering quality and choices can absolutely have a greater impact than delivery format. In my library I can think of an album stored as MP3 (MP3 was all that was offered of this particular title) that sounds better in terms of sound quality, compression be damned, than some other albums I own presented via FLAC.

  • @mwmaccount
    @mwmaccount Před 8 měsíci +5

    John, this is a superb and much needed explanation of the ultimate importance of mastering and of dynamic range. There is one significant omission that I would urge you to clarify, if possible, which is the difference between dynamic range compression and file compression of a digital format recording. Understanding that distinction is essential for understanding your overall argument.

  • @abxaudiophiles
    @abxaudiophiles Před 8 měsíci

    GREAT STUFF!!!!! Such a usefull perspective for all of us as audiophiles to consider! Thank you for sharing!

  • @patrikbjorling4391
    @patrikbjorling4391 Před 8 měsíci +2

    I am doing the laundry and I had to pause and give you a huge HUG because this is VERY important stuff that no one seems to care about these days..back to laundry.

    • @charlesdavis5542
      @charlesdavis5542 Před 8 měsíci +1

      John airs the record industry dirty drawers-we do our,uh..laundry.

  • @rolandlickert2904
    @rolandlickert2904 Před 8 měsíci +3

    Lucky me I have plenty of CDs from the 80th and 90th.Nice clip you going back to the basics and that is Music and how it's recorded! That was always my first priority and the HiFi system came afterwards. If you had good recorded Music then even a mediocre system sounded good. Some people forget that and chase the holy grail!

  • @rafaeldeyavorsky5766
    @rafaeldeyavorsky5766 Před 8 měsíci +1

    Thank you for this great explanation... it cleares a lot of thing to me....

  • @dirk-jansmit9772
    @dirk-jansmit9772 Před 8 měsíci +1

    Excellent explanation of a a complex mix of concepts. Well done!

  • @chrisc6935
    @chrisc6935 Před 8 měsíci +1

    I don’t think I’ve ever heard a remastered album that sounds better than the original.

  • @hanneskluytenaar6908
    @hanneskluytenaar6908 Před 8 měsíci

    Very, very, VERY, happy with your explanation. You put in words what I heard so often. Really interested in that list.

  • @dan_from_australia
    @dan_from_australia Před 8 měsíci

    Great analysis of the extent different factors influence the sound of a recording. Thanks John

  • @venvedam
    @venvedam Před 8 měsíci

    Very nice and informative, thanks John for shedding light on this finally

  • @VicenteSansaloni
    @VicenteSansaloni Před 8 měsíci +1

    @Darko Audio 100% agree.
    The recording and the master are the most important factors for the final quality, much more than the format.
    In the other side, regarding the dynamic range, the vinyl is the physical format more limited.

  • @sudipchatterjee
    @sudipchatterjee Před 8 měsíci +2

    ❤🙌 A gem of a video, this is!

  • @SaraCarterSimplyMixing
    @SaraCarterSimplyMixing Před 8 měsíci +5

    It's common for mastering engineers to create different masters for vinyl releases that don't feature the heavy compression techniques used for CD's or downloads. Your vinyl edition of the 2023 album might very well have more dynamic range than the hi-res files. It would be an interesting check if you can be arsed to rip the vinyl of course! Great video , thanks.

  • @osmanyhernandez4539
    @osmanyhernandez4539 Před 8 měsíci

    I can’t stress enough how extremely well explained is the issue here. I can’t wait for the continuation!

  • @DavidJenne
    @DavidJenne Před 8 měsíci +1

    This was awesome. I learned a lot. Thank you!!

  • @cemkilicli
    @cemkilicli Před 8 měsíci +1

    Great content, thank you for sharing.

  • @coreySLC
    @coreySLC Před 8 měsíci

    You answered questions I didn’t realize I even had. Thank you.

  • @368crv
    @368crv Před 8 měsíci

    Great review John. Made me listen to this album again.

  • @ScottGamble1
    @ScottGamble1 Před 8 měsíci +1

    God damn, John. Sometimes you post a video that just resonates with the nerd me, and this is a great example. Thanks for taking us down the DR rabbit hole. Amazing. Thank you.

  • @TjayMaxx
    @TjayMaxx Před 8 měsíci +1

    Man, that was a full geek out there John. Love it!

  • @MattSB2588
    @MattSB2588 Před 8 měsíci +1

    Your conclusion will hopefully reach a huge number of people and prevent arguments over which format is best etc. Compressing the dynamic range just makes for fatiguing listening.
    Great video. Your best.

  • @Rondoggy67
    @Rondoggy67 Před 8 měsíci +3

    Tidal used to have original and remastered versions of a lot of stuff. Universally, the originals were better even with background noise. Now it’s usually only the remasters, which have quite heavy noise reduction. They generally sound less engaging.

  • @denisruskin348
    @denisruskin348 Před 8 měsíci +11

    Remasters are usually always worse.

    • @ocularcavity8412
      @ocularcavity8412 Před 8 měsíci

      VERY true so far there is only one remaster that I EVER Liked and it was a 90's release of Moody Blues - Days of Future Passed on CD and other that particular one all the other CD' SACD's and HiRes Releases sound TERRIBLE. Even on Vinyl most later pressing are VERY FLAT sounding and are very thin. The older thicker ones tend to sound better but I feel it is more about the mastering and not the weight or thickness itself, just that later on they started cutting costs EVERYWHERE they could and thinner = cheaper

  • @gregwilliams2746
    @gregwilliams2746 Před 8 měsíci

    Great commentary, D! Thanks to your vid, I'm seeing the loudness wars in a softer light. I have been thinking of dynamic compression as always a bad thing but it is really a mastering choice, like the amount of seasoning in food. Some audio mastering peeps might want to bring out the quieter passages more and it might sound better than leaving it alone. I definitely have some tracks where the dynamic range is so great I cannot find a volume that allows me to hear the details of the softer bits unless I also want to be blasted by the loud bits! This could be because I'm getting older and losing my hearing but it could also be because a sound system tends to produce less detail at lower volumes?

  • @andrewcrossley2448
    @andrewcrossley2448 Před 8 měsíci +2

    Excellent set of examples. Also helps me understand why my original LPs of Pink Floyd from the 1970s sound better than the recent vinyl remasters. Off loaded a new copy of DSOTM to my brother to play on his Rega TT, phono stage and Naim Muso with its digital amp as it’s not up to my pure analogue vinyl set up.

  • @chriscleverley4320
    @chriscleverley4320 Před 8 měsíci +3

    Mixing and mastering engineers are just as important to the end product as the musicians. If you want to delve further I recommend ’The Mixing Engineers Handbook’ by Bobby Owinski. He explains the tools and how engineers use them to create different audio experiences, covering instrument placement, use of space, compression, equalisation and more. The stylistic choices the mixing and mastering engineers make ultimately affect your listening experience and how you engage with the music.

  • @ittak3stwo
    @ittak3stwo Před 8 měsíci

    Sat a couple rows behind you at the screening in Berlin today. I had an absolut blast, what a great piece of music and movie material.

  • @chrisblock6697
    @chrisblock6697 Před 8 měsíci +1

    I saw the movie in Ann Arbor in a theater when it came out. Nobody was in their seats, everyone up and dancing. We were all high as kites.

  • @ValerioCongeduti
    @ValerioCongeduti Před 8 měsíci

    This video is so clear and clever! Thank you

  • @0hFFSmyeyes
    @0hFFSmyeyes Před 8 měsíci

    Brilliant, very informative. Subbed in fact

  • @neil3112
    @neil3112 Před 8 měsíci +2

    Really enjoyed this one. It is about time someone started talking about mastering and dynamic range. It is a travesty that for all advancements made most music (IMO at least) sounds worse now than it is did 30 years ago.
    I cannot imagine record labels stopping the 'Make it louder' request so maybe the best we can hope for is an additional mastering? Kind of surprised that artists are not on this, surely they would want their music to sound as good as it possibly could?

    • @andrewbrazier9664
      @andrewbrazier9664 Před 8 měsíci

      Majority of artists make most of their money through concerts now. New albums are often concert promos....

  • @MrSwiss90
    @MrSwiss90 Před 8 měsíci

    Wow, wow, wow. I am no one of importance, but a fan of what you do. Awesome explanation of dynamic range. I will be using your video as a reference to help explain to friends and family why dynamic range matters. Thanks for what you do. Cheers.

  • @erikleenhouts834
    @erikleenhouts834 Před 8 měsíci

    Thanks for this, that explains a lot 👍

  • @thisplayer01
    @thisplayer01 Před 8 měsíci +2

    brilliant insights - thanks!

  • @steveoddy982
    @steveoddy982 Před 8 měsíci

    Fantastic example of how mastering is so much more important than format. It's always the source material that is the most important, regardless of platform.

  • @shimtest
    @shimtest Před 8 měsíci

    brilliant video. best explanation of what to look for (listen for) that I've ever watched

  • @esce69
    @esce69 Před 8 měsíci

    Thanks for explaining the dynamic range graphic. To display this is a feature in MusicBee and I used to think it represented recording volume, but quickly noticed this wasn't the case. Then I just forgot about it but now I know.

  • @andrewwebb1911
    @andrewwebb1911 Před 8 měsíci

    Thanks John.

  • @hughmnyks
    @hughmnyks Před 8 měsíci

    Thank-you for that!

  • @atzeotze2256
    @atzeotze2256 Před 8 měsíci +2

    Have you checked the dynamic range on the vinyl ?
    Is this possible with the software ?

  • @markyexley9440
    @markyexley9440 Před 8 měsíci +2

    Bagged myself an original early UK CD. What an amazing sounding album!

  • @jamieirwin6333
    @jamieirwin6333 Před 8 měsíci

    Excellent review, love the detailed explanations of the various releases. I will avoid the 2LP release now and search for the Bluray version.
    I go to DR loudness website regularly and agree 100% to your findings, but there are occasions I prefer the lower DR version if the percussion has been turned up, I find this can sound more natural as drums are loud. My preference.
    Keep it up to help inform and maybe the studios will get the message that a dynamic version will sell better…maybe…
    Great channel, cheers Mate!

  • @brandonburr4900
    @brandonburr4900 Před 8 měsíci

    Finally a album I'm familiar with! I think unfortunately I have the 1999 CD version but have had this on cassette (remember those? ) forever. You can tell this music was never squished back in the day. I wish they wouldn't keep releasing another version just to squeeze and compress it. Astering engineers had to know how my h of a classic this was. Not the first time I have heard that the audio portion of a blue ray sounds the best. Heard this many times. Thank you!

  • @Dimitris_Pappas
    @Dimitris_Pappas Před 8 měsíci

    Thanks! Very informative.

  • @wads_o_hair
    @wads_o_hair Před 8 měsíci +2

    There were analog cassette versions released in 1984 in the US with pretty good dynamic range, one with the LP tracks, and a special edition with "extended" (i.e., not edited) tracks.

  • @janspaan6122
    @janspaan6122 Před 8 měsíci

    Thanks John, very very interesting 👍

  • @claudebbg
    @claudebbg Před 8 měsíci +2

    Such precious explanation (and especially about This album versions, I heard it 1st at a friend's place and had so much difficulties to find The right version I heard). Isn't roon giving this info natively ?

  • @cillyede
    @cillyede Před 8 měsíci +1

    Die Zeit, die man verschwendet, über das „richtige“ Format zu diskutieren, fehlt am Ende zum Musik hören. 😂 Good vid again. 🎶

  • @georgebarronjr
    @georgebarronjr Před 8 měsíci +8

    I consider myself an audiophile....which is the only real criteria for who is and who isn't one, if you think about it. I have some fairly high end equipment and speakers. Maybe I don't have golden ears. Probably don't. But in general the format the music comes in doesn't seem to matter to me. I like to think I can tell MP3 from CD or hi-res but I'm not sure I'd pass a blind test to prove it.
    The two things that consistently make a difference to me is the quality/production/engineering of the music and the level of dynamic range compression.
    I hear folks say that badly produced/recorded music can be corrected with the proper gear and set up. I call BS on that. Garbage in; garbage out.
    I hear folks say the same about dynamic range compression. I call BS on that too. I do not think that it is even physically/scientifically possible.
    Even with a lack of golden ears, I can easily detect and do not like overly DR compressed music unless I'm in the car or just have it playing in the background. (Of course judiciously used DR compression, especially with classical music is fine.)
    Soooo, for me the quest for recordings, regardless of the format, is for those that are not overly DR compressed or that are produced/engineered better. And I don't enjoy the quest. It isn't part of the fun.

  • @TorToroPorco
    @TorToroPorco Před 8 měsíci +3

    The engineering and mastering makes it huge difference. I've heard some great recordings on vinyl EPS that sound better than the original album versions. Even when the original version is played on much more expensive turntables they don't sound as good as the EP played on lesser equipment. The dynamic range on some of the better mastered CDs from the 80s & 90 are amazing.

  • @DAVID-io9nj
    @DAVID-io9nj Před 8 měsíci +1

    The master mix is KING. You can not get better audio, regardless of format, than what is on the mix. I am a firm believer that a standard CD is more than good enough. Most of the bad rep of CD audio was due to bad master mixes being used.

  • @davea3791
    @davea3791 Před 8 měsíci

    Need to find my original CD! Thanks for the detailed video.

  • @zambination11
    @zambination11 Před 8 měsíci

    Excellent. Well done. 👏

  • @alanjipy55
    @alanjipy55 Před 8 měsíci +4

    I have the original DVD of, Fleetwood mac. The dance. I pop the disc in just to listen to, Gypsy in pcm. It sounds much better than the version on, Tidal.
    I've had the disc for about 30 years. It was the first DVD i bought.

  • @dwdrum11
    @dwdrum11 Před 8 měsíci

    Brilliant article. Very enjoyable to listen to your thoughts. Superb video