Topic: Time for a little FLAC ?
Howdy all,
OK well I've been playing around with other people's music a bit lately and noticed something that may not be too important, but might have impact on those of us that are moving sound files around like a tennis ball at Wimbleton.
One thing I have noticed is that after a couple of times encoding and decoding MP3 files (which are compressed), the odd bits that are discarded by compression add up to a pretty big loss in quality. The end result kind of gets "muddy".
There is another codec out there called FLAC (free-lossless-audio-codec) which although it doesn't get the files as small as MP3 (within 6-7%), retains all of the original sound data.
I have been doing a little research on it and it looks like a pretty good alternative for those already-mixed compilations that are going up for an additional track or two. I don't see a lot of benefit in not using MP3 for individual instrument and vocal tracks, because there is so little data in those tracks that there is not a lot to toss out in compression.
For you audacity users, FLAC is supported native to version 1.3.3beta, and the FLAC codec is available as a plug in at www.flac.sourceforge.net along with documentation supporting the quality of the codec, along with techno-babble.
What brought it to the forefront was Russell's recent foray into the Traxx studio and the well done final mix result.... yes I grabbed it off your mediafire page! Darn! WAV format, the thing is 32Mb HUGE! Could be a bleeding eternity for our friends across the pond to download if there's a bandwidth bottleneck. But it would be nice to have a MP3 of the recording you did at home and of the Traxx (wmv compressed) to do an apples/apples comparison. I'm thinking that there will be a difference because of the studio space and all that high dollar equipment.... but maybe not as much difference as one would expect.
Take Care; Doug