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SurfGuitar101 Forums » Recording Corner »

Permalink MP3 advice

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I've had an interesting week learning about recording and CDs. Mike from Green Cookie sent a comment about our recordings (on the website) sounding 'thin', which was a surprise as the recordings were originally really good. So I compared our CD on iTunes with the original mastered CD from the studio. There was a world of difference. The CD sounded awesome in comparison. On my iTunes, I've been using MP3 compression, which probably explains the rubbish sound quality.
Can anyone recommend formats and/or software to give decent sound quality for online listening?

http://thewaterboarders.bandcamp.com/

I use the lame encoder set to 320kbps (insane) No to VBR (variable bit rate) or any another form of file size reduction.

pass

Last edited: Dec 22, 2014 15:16:13

What do you mean by 'on-line' listening?

Jake, we have files online at Bandcamp and our website - I'd like them to sound as good as possible...

http://thewaterboarders.bandcamp.com/

Bandcamp is cool, because you can have music of any format. We have 24-bit 96khz files up, this is higher than a CD's 16-bit 48khz. I'm not sure what Bandcamp does for streaming, but chances are they downsample for the streaming portion. But, for the downloads you can upload any file you want.

I would suggest getting the highest quality file you can get from whoever mastered your album. This isn't the CD master, this is the native master files.

I buy all my digital releases as ALE (Apple Lossless Encoding) (preferred) or FLAC, which I then convert to ALE. Since my DAC can't do more than 44.1khz (Jake, isn't 48khz DAT?) I wouldn't bother with anything higher.

Nowadays disk is sooo cheap, it doesn't make sense to me to bother with lossless encodings.

If you upload the highest resolution files to Bandcamp, they sound good IMO. Bandcamp will convert them to MP3 (or serve them at full resolution), but they do a decent job of it.

www.apollo4.com

da-ron wrote:

So I compared our CD on iTunes with the original mastered CD from the studio. There was a world of difference.

We have a similar problem: When we put our latest release up on iTunes the last track (PipeOut) just sounded horrible, even in comparison to other mp3s. Since I don't use iTunes and our bass player handles alls this stuff, I don't really know if or how we found a solution for this. Cry

Los Apollos - cinematic surf music trio (Berlin)
"Postcards from the Scrapyard" Vol. 1, 2 & 3 NOW available on various platforms!
"Chaos at the Lobster Lounge" available as LP and download on Surf Cookie Records!

Steve wrote:

44.1khz (Jake, isn't 48khz DAT?)

Yep, You are correct!

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