Where can I find 24bit/96Khz music?
Where can I find 24bit/96Khz music? Posted on: 11.12.2013 by Vikki Falkenrath I see this as the limit of sound quality for many sound devices, like CDJs and etc.But where can I get tracks with this quality? I can't seem to get nothing higher than 16bit/44,1khz at beatport. I'm just curious, I know I won't hear the difference with my headphones or speakers. | |
Vikki Falkenrath 20.12.2013 |
Originally Posted by 3heads
I said I can hear the difference of quality between tracks with different bit rates. Am I the first person you meet to say it? There is a whole market for 1411kbps tracks.. |
Celestine Porebski 20.12.2013 |
Originally Posted by Shishdisma
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Nancey Inderlied 20.12.2013 |
Originally Posted by 3heads
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Rolanda Clodfelder 20.12.2013 |
Originally Posted by 3heads
A straight up rip from a CD to mp3 "can" be noticeable on certain tracks with certain frequencies, I don't believe for one moment that every 320kbps ripped track would be apparent - in a blind test However if its been produced and mastered exclusively for lossy digital distribution the effects can be made up for to make it as clean as the original, albeit slightly "different sounding" . |
Vikki Falkenrath 20.12.2013 |
Originally Posted by Patch
I've spent way too much time synchronising tracks and trying to find perfect beat superpositions. Of course people in the crowd who don't DJ won't hear the difference, some of them won't even notice that the beats are drifting like hell. But I will, and hearing clean sounds gets me in the mood when I'm playing. |
Celestine Porebski 20.12.2013 |
Originally Posted by Patch
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Brunilda Kora 20.12.2013 |
I hear the clear difference between AIFF and MP3
Worrying about this type of thing is EXACTLY what will stop you from progressing as amusicion/DJ/perfomer. It's a distraction. |
Vikki Falkenrath 20.12.2013 |
Originally Posted by Shishdisma
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Tesha Freudenstein 20.12.2013 | only 24bit track i own have been given away directly by producers. |
Nancey Inderlied 19.12.2013 |
Originally Posted by M.Beijer
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Mimi Mahaffee 19.12.2013 | I get few tracks from the naim label and http://www.highresaudio.com/ however there's not alot of music there which I use for djing. Just for listening at home, and boy, there is a huge difference but as someone mentioned it's not worth to bring to a club. You will need some serious HiFi to make it worth with high res audio. |
Adele Koscher 19.12.2013 | I agree with deevey, it's useful in production and for processing, but for the final output it's unnecessary despite what some folks say. If the text of the previous link is a bit wordy, this is a fairly well known video that explains with some great demos too: http://xiph.org/video/vid2.shtml |
Vikki Falkenrath 11.12.2013 | Hm, thanks |
Rolanda Clodfelder 11.12.2013 |
Originally Posted by Daniboy
I can't seem to get nothing higher than 16bit/44,1khz at beatport.
I'm just curious, I know I won't hear the difference with my headphones or speakers.
Great topic on headfi ... http://www.head-fi.org/t/415361/24bi...-myth-exploded Bottom line really is that 24bit is only really useful for the studio mix when combining multiple tracks together it gives you more room to maneuver. 24/96 track in a club is a bit like driving a lamborgini in heavy traffic - utterly pointless |
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