01-22-2013, 01:59 PM
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#1
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Unfrozen Caveman Lawyer
Join Date: Oct 2002
Location: Crowsnest Pass
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Pono - Neil Young
Neil Young Reveals the New Killer Gadget That Will Save Music
http://www.openculture.com/2012/10/n...ave_music.html
For quite some time now, Young has lamented the decline of music during the digital age. It’s not pirating that’s the culprit. It’s the MP3, a format that degrades the quality of the music we hear. Speaking at a Wall Street Journal conference earlier this year (watch here), Young complained that the MP3 can’t “transfer the depth of the art.” “My goal,” he continued, “is to try and rescue the art form that I’ve been practicing for the past 50 years.”
Enter PureTone, which has actually been renamed Pono more recently. The device/music service will hit the market next year, and it essentially promises to let fans hear recordings in super high fidelity, as if they owned the original master tapes created by various artists.
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01-22-2013, 03:29 PM
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#2
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wins 10 internets
Join Date: Feb 2006
Location: slightly to the left
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until i looked at the thread title more closely, i had a vastly different idea of what it would be about
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01-22-2013, 03:35 PM
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#3
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Basement Chicken Choker
Join Date: Jan 2007
Location: In a land without pants, or war, or want. But mostly we care about the pants.
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Neil's new book talks about it quite a bit. Pono, however, is a terrible brand name.
__________________
Better educated sadness than oblivious joy.
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01-22-2013, 03:38 PM
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#4
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Unfrozen Caveman Lawyer
Join Date: Oct 2002
Location: Crowsnest Pass
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Quote:
Originally Posted by jammies
Neil's new book talks about it quite a bit. Pono, however, is a terrible brand name.
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Yeah, that is where I learned about it too. It was called PureTone before. Quite the rambling book.
The skeptic in me wonders whether lay-people can really hear the difference. There was another thread where it was shown people can't discern the supposed better sound of quality of vinyl vs. CDs.
The cheap skate in me does not want to have to replace my whole library with Pono, if it is indeed that much better.
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01-22-2013, 04:17 PM
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#5
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#1 Goaltender
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Quote:
Originally Posted by troutman
The skeptic in me wonders whether lay-people can really hear the difference. There was another thread where it was shown people can't discern the supposed better sound of quality of vinyl vs. CDs.
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More interesting, in my opinion, is whether the current teen/young adult demographic would prefer something truer to the mixing board master. They've grown up on the MP3 sound, selected headphones with frequency response attuned to it, and indeed, much of their music is being mastered for reproduction via a lossy medium.
Are they really ready for music that has actual ..gasp..dynamics? With greater fidelity in the treble range? Snares and cymbals that sound like actual snares and cymbals?
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-Scott
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01-22-2013, 04:19 PM
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#6
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Franchise Player
Join Date: Nov 2006
Location: Supporting Urban Sprawl
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Maybe it is because I spent north of 12 years working in a extremely loud environment, but I can't tell the difference between $4 ear buds and $100 ear buds.
I doubt switching from MP3 to anything else really would do much for me.
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01-22-2013, 04:21 PM
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#7
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#1 Goaltender
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this...is so easy I'm not even going to bother talking about how I already have a massive library of Pono. damn, there it went.
low res MP3s are one issue, although I think the bad old days of 128kbps napster files continue to gradually fade away. iTunes downloads are still lossy but the algorithm is far superior so it isn't distinguishable from the original in most cases. even if you're the type that doesn't pay for stuff, lossless FLACs are pretty standard issue.
what's a bigger problem, besides us old #######s hating all music since our teen years, is clipping. when I hear that crackling sound because the studio engineer was stupid and wanted to make it as loud as possible, I want to murder bags of kittens.
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01-22-2013, 04:47 PM
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#8
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Basement Chicken Choker
Join Date: Jan 2007
Location: In a land without pants, or war, or want. But mostly we care about the pants.
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Quote:
Originally Posted by troutman
The skeptic in me wonders whether lay-people can really hear the difference. There was another thread where it was shown people can't discern the supposed better sound of quality of vinyl vs. CDs.
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Yah, he mentions more than once that the "sound quality" of analog is better than digital, and that LPs sound better than CDs, but I think he is confused between "quality" and "the sound I am used to". I am a huge Neil Young fan, but when he also talks about how he spent money trying to get a water-powered vehicle to work before he went to biofuel+electric, it makes me wonder if he has a few misfires in his critical thinking skills.
I can barely tell the difference between a CD and a decent quality MP3. I can immediately tell the difference between vinyl and a CD, though, because vinyl has that background hum and distortion. Vinyl is also variable in quality across the platter (because the grooves are different sizes) and loses definition when you oversaturate it with more information than can be carried on the medium, although it degrades gracefully, unlike digital media. Still, you can hardly say a vinyl album is better quality, you might like the sound better, but that is learned preference, not better fidelity.
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Better educated sadness than oblivious joy.
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01-22-2013, 04:49 PM
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#9
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Basement Chicken Choker
Join Date: Jan 2007
Location: In a land without pants, or war, or want. But mostly we care about the pants.
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And Inglewood Jack has a good point, the main problem with music today is clipping and over-compression to try to get music to be as loud as possible on crappy playback equipment. That won't be fixed by any kind of media change, that's something that needs to be fixed by the engineers who are mangling the product.
__________________
Better educated sadness than oblivious joy.
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01-23-2013, 09:29 AM
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#10
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First Line Centre
Join Date: Oct 2002
Location: Calgary
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Quote:
Originally Posted by jammies
Still, you can hardly say a vinyl album is better quality, you might like the sound better, but that is learned preference, not better fidelity.
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This is actually scientifically incorrect. Analog audio, technically, is superior to digital. I'm not saying anything about vinyl as a medium specifically, but there's always something lost in an analog to digital conversion.
I'd imagine only a very small percentage of music listeners even have the gear to appreciate a lossless digital format, never mind whatever Pono will deliver. Regardless of what Flea says, I seriously doubt most people would even know this is higher fidelity music.
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01-23-2013, 10:12 AM
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#11
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Took an arrow to the knee
Join Date: Mar 2006
Location: Toronto
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Why would they call it Pono?! Seriously, why? People are going to rip that apart with jokes.
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"An adherent of homeopathy has no brain. They have skull water with the memory of a brain."
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01-23-2013, 10:38 AM
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#12
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One of the Nine
Join Date: Jul 2007
Location: Space Sector 2814
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I have the same feelings now as I did when I read about it in his book, I am sure the idea is great... but I don't want to rebuild my entire music library.
I might start buying albums in this quality down the road.. but I will most likely wait till they have tested for a while. I did read somewhere in his book that one of the big record labels already transformed thousands of albums.. or whatever they need to do to make it this quality.
They should offer those albums for free to anyone that purchased the MP3 quality previously, this would get me firmly on board.
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01-23-2013, 11:57 AM
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#13
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#1 Goaltender
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Quote:
Originally Posted by MickMcGeough
This is actually scientifically incorrect. Analog audio, technically, is superior to digital. I'm not saying anything about vinyl as a medium specifically, but there's always something lost in an analog to digital conversion.
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Highly debatable - leaving aside vinyl as a specific medium, every analog storage medium has inherent distortion. When you're dealing with magnetic media for example, you're dealing with reactive components (electrical fields generated in coils), and those have their own response curves, distortion, bandwidth limitations, etc. Throw variance in the magnetic media itself, tape wow and flutter (exists even on high end studio gear at some level), and its almost certainly less precise a recording method than high rate digital sampling.
At the extremes of fidelity, I can digitally sample discrete values at ever increasing rates, and simply consume more storage at a linear rate per sampling interval. Analog mediums, however, run into intrinsic physics based limits that you can't overcome. I can guarantee you I can run a digital sampler at higher frequency rates than the rise and fall time of traditional analog recording techniques that rely on magnetic fields induced in coils, and then depend on the media they are writing to responding perfectly to the magnetic field and inducing precisely the correct magnetic charge for that exact point in time.
In fact, you can't even build an analog oscillator with the same kind of accuracy as a digital one to drive the tape across the recording head at exactly the right velocity, so you've already got to dip into digital technology to preserve temporal fidelity.
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-Scott
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01-23-2013, 12:30 PM
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#14
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Basement Chicken Choker
Join Date: Jan 2007
Location: In a land without pants, or war, or want. But mostly we care about the pants.
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Quote:
Originally Posted by MickMcGeough
This is actually scientifically incorrect. Analog audio, technically, is superior to digital. I'm not saying anything about vinyl as a medium specifically, but there's always something lost in an analog to digital conversion.
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Any medium you use for analog audio s going to degrade the quality. You are confusing the analog waveform you are recording with the recording itself: because an analog medium invariably introduces distortion (tape or vinyl), it is never going to be as accurate as a sufficiently sampled digital recording, which introduces no distortion and can have as arbitrarily high dynamic range and fidelity as you like, up to the technical limitations of your equipment.
Analog has built-in fidelity limits imposed by the medium and the equipment used, including, but not limited to: the specific formulation of the metal on the tape (if you were around in the 80s, you might remember the different types of cassette tapes you could buy, of differing prices and quality); the thickness of the tape; the reading/writing strength of the tape heads while recording and playing back; the saturation level of the recorded waveform; the flutter and distortion introduced by physical media flowing through a complex geared system; tape stretch; and the accumulation of oxides on the tape heads as the media scrapes over them.
To say that you "lose something" when doing a analog/digital conversion is true, but you undoubtedly lose MORE recording to analog because of these factors. Further, because these are physical limitations, they are not nearly as easy to overcome as limitations in the digital realm, where error-checking has had literally billions of man-hours dedicated to its perfection, since it is both fundamental and critical to computers, networks, and every other digital technology we depend on.
So, to summarize, it is a misconception that analog equipment is more faithful than digital because you are not converting anything - you *are* converting sound to something else, that being a copy of that sound in a different medium than the air it travels over to your ear. Digital conversion is theoretically better (and now, in actuality better as well) because it is not limited by the physical medium in which that copy is stored, and can be as true to the source as you have computing power to make it.
This is also why digital photography has almost completely replaced film, and there, too, the purists decry the loss of quality against the demonstrable fact that sufficiently high resolutions of digital film only differ from analog in that they have better fidelity due to the same mastery of error-checking. Subjective opinions otherwise have no basis.
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Better educated sadness than oblivious joy.
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01-23-2013, 12:31 PM
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#15
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Basement Chicken Choker
Join Date: Jan 2007
Location: In a land without pants, or war, or want. But mostly we care about the pants.
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Ha, I took too long typing that out. Damn you sclitheroe!
__________________
Better educated sadness than oblivious joy.
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01-23-2013, 12:43 PM
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#16
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#1 Goaltender
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Quote:
Originally Posted by jammies
Ha, I took too long typing that out. Damn you sclitheroe!
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Heh.
I still respect those that prefer analogue (hell, a lot of times I like certain material in mono, or played in mono, if I can get it); it's a very subjective topic.
One interesting thing I was reading recently, that I'll have to find a link for, is that the human auditory system, at the nerve impulse level, is a series of "ticks" - that is to say, the analog waveform in the ear canal is actually translated to digital nerve impulses that the brain then interprets as an analog sound.
So in fact we can argue all we want about digital vs analogue recording, but the sound actually reaches our brain as a digital signal in the end.
__________________
-Scott
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01-25-2013, 12:29 AM
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#18
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First Line Centre
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Once again blown away by the depth of comprehension people on CP have in areas I have no knowledge in whatsoever. Great posts Sclitheroe and Jammies. Well done.
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01-25-2013, 11:05 AM
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#19
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First Line Centre
Join Date: Oct 2002
Location: Calgary
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Thanks jammies, sclitheroe - good audio education in here.
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