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erdega
Suspended User

Registered: Feb 2002
Location: back in T.O
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| quote: | Originally posted by skip
i have broadband and a bigger hard disk! but the world doesn't work very well if everyone would just think about themselves.  |
You should not think about yourelf only or the entire world out there but the specific audience and how you want to preent this mix to them
| quote: | | Originally posted by skip i'd say that most people can't hear any difference between a 192kbps and a 320kbps dj mix and it certainly isn't as relevant in dj mixes as it is on singles IMO. |
I can hear and I know that in electronic music dynamic range is important to hear different sounds so you are depriving your listeners of the experience by lowering standards. Certainly if you are DJ , you need to mind and know the quality. Having said that , I did a little test here to hear the difference between WAV-cd quality, 320k and 192k mp3 and I can hear the difference where 320k is compressed but still full but 192k gets weak especially in bass and high sounds. Just listen to these samples with volume down and then volume up.
75 seconds of A&B- good for me
1_Good_For_Me__Radio_Edit__1.wav (12.45 MB)
http://www.mediafire.com/?exldlizz32t
1_Good_For_Me__Radio_Edit__1(320k).mp3 (2.83 MB)
http://www.mediafire.com/?agjat5odyey
1_Good_For_Me__Radio_Edit__2(192k).mp3 (1.7 MB)
http://www.mediafire.com/?7dk5ui4m4r2
| quote: | | Originally posted by skip sure, you can put your mixes up in blu ray format, but it doesn't make any sense at all. |
No one has yet put tracks in blu ray which is high resolution, multi channel but I'd love to hear it
| quote: | | Originally posted by skip if you recorded speeches and put those up for download for people. for students for example, so they could hear what the professor had said or something. would you record those in blu ray format too and put them up in blu ray format so everyone would get the best |
you are mixing things up a bit, speech does not have high dynamics unles it's very screechy so to speak but I will say anything below 128k for speech is a pain to listen to . Likewise rock and maybe hip hop is preety straightforward music which is less affected by quality of recording
| quote: | Originally posted by skip possible quality? i think not, as speech can still sound pretty good even as a rather low bitrate mp3, so there would be no real advantage over putting it up in some really high quality format, but there'd be a lot of disadvantages. the case here is pretty similar IMO, just not nearly as extreme. |
It's a matter of quality over quantity. I can certainly say that higher bitrate produces better sound with less garble and something I can enjoy to listen to over and over again. As for me , I delete any audio file below 320k as it hurts my ears listening to it again

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May-09-2007 15:51
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Tony Morello
The Renegade Master

Registered: Apr 2001
Location: Calgary, Alberta, Canada
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May-09-2007 20:33
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tvmann
Supreme tranceaddict

Registered: Jul 2003
Location: near Vancouver, Canada
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I did a quick test on redegas's posting of the 3 sample downloads (nice track btw) and on my computer setup (SB Audigy, HK speakers with sub) I can't hear any difference. This computer is probably typical of what people will use to check out someone's DJ mix. I'll move the files to a better computer soundcard/speaker setup for another test later. BTW the encoder seems to be Fraunhofer which I don't think is the best, Lame has the best reputation AFAIK.
Most EDM has been compressed like hell so there is no dynamic range really. After all it's meant to be played in a noisy place where many people are talking loud and probably drunk, and most music these days has been compressed a lot for radio, CDs. There are no subtle nuances in most EDM. It's not like classical music. The MP3 process does not try to change the levels (compression), it tries to keep the music sounding exactly the same, that is the goal after all, not to tinker with the final sound. The lower bitrates do however cut off more and more high frequency (above 18Khz for 192 kbits/sec) (most adults can't hear much above 16 Khz so generally it's not very noticeable).
I would be less inclined to download someone's mix if it was 320K unless I knew it was really good, it just wastes bandwidth and time. 192 or even lower is fine for DJ mixes, but put up the mix at different bitrates if you want.
There is a point to be made for putting out mixes at low bitrates, that way you are not competing with sales by the original track artists and showing them more respect. Remember amateur DJs are putting out the original artists' work almost certainly without permission so they shouldn't be giving away high quality versions of other people's work, the objective is to show how well someone can mix, not to provide people with high quality copies of copyrighted music.
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May-10-2007 04:31
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saltytheseagull
Supreme tranceaddict
Registered: Feb 2005
Location: USA
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192. Anything more is pointless for a mix unless you're mass producing a CD from it.
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May-11-2007 06:14
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