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#1
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Attended an AES seminar today given by John Vanderkooy of the University of
Waterloo, Waterloo Ontario entitled: "A Digital-Domain Listening Test for High-Resolution Audio" Vanderkooy maintained that he has no doubt, after many ABX and DB tests performed at the University that "...some people can, reliably, and in a statistically meaningful way, detect the differences between 16-bit, 44.1 KHz audio and the same program material recorded at 24-bit and 176.4 or 192 KHz." He also added that there are also many people who CANNOT hear these differences in a statistically meaningful way, so the jury is still out on the efficacy or need for high-resolution digital audio. Several comments made by Mr Vanderkooy that I found very interesting: (1) He felt that 44.1 KHz was chosen too hastily as the standard and that the industry would have done better to settle on 48 KHz. (2) If one is mastering in high-resolution with an eye to the resultant product being Redbook CD, then it would be better to use 176.4 Khz than to use 192 KHz because 176.4 is an exact multiple of 44.1. During the Q&A session which followed Mr. Vanderkooy's presentation, a number of recording engineers in the audience voiced opinions about working with high-resolution masters. Several said that in their experience, the session musicians preferred high-resolution capture overwhelmingly, stating that in playback, they found the instruments to sound more like what they heard when actually playing the instruments than did the same material captured at 16/44.1. One British recording engineer from TELDEC stated that harmonically rich instruments like violin, cymbals, and marimbas sound threadbare and missing in harmonic richness when captured at standard CD resolution. He used an example that when these instruments are playing, there are harmonically related ultrasonic sounds at say, 24 KHz and 27 KHz (chosen as an example to illustrate the point) that "beat" in the air to form a 3KHz difference signal and without good wide-band recordings, these harmonically related "beats" are lost in playback. I wanted to ask this guy after the session "if this 3KHz difference signal is formed in the air of the venue between the instrument and the microphone, was it not simply picked up by the microphone at that time? Certainly, any good condenser mike can pick-up any 3KHz sound in the room and even 16-bit/44.1 KHz can certainly quantize it, why does he feel that it is necessary for the process to preserve the ultrasonic harmonics that form this "beat" frequency?" But he got away from me before I was able to catch up with him. All in all a very enlightening and interesting paper. I have a copy of it and believe me I will study it carefully of the next few days to glean as much as possible from it. |
#2
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"Audio Empire" wrote in message ...
Attended an AES seminar today given by John Vanderkooy of the University of Waterloo, Waterloo Ontario entitled: "A Digital-Domain Listening Test for High-Resolution Audio" Vanderkooy maintained that he has no doubt, after many ABX and DB tests performed at the University that "...some people can, reliably, and in a statistically meaningful way, detect the differences between 16-bit, 44.1 KHz audio and the same program material recorded at 24-bit and 176.4 or 192 KHz." He also added that there are also many people who CANNOT hear these differences in a statistically meaningful way, so the jury is still out on the efficacy or need for high-resolution digital audio. Several comments made by Mr Vanderkooy that I found very interesting: (1) He felt that 44.1 KHz was chosen too hastily as the standard and that the industry would have done better to settle on 48 KHz. (2) If one is mastering in high-resolution with an eye to the resultant product being Redbook CD, then it would be better to use 176.4 Khz than to use 192 KHz because 176.4 is an exact multiple of 44.1. During the Q&A session which followed Mr. Vanderkooy's presentation, a number of recording engineers in the audience voiced opinions about working with high-resolution masters. Several said that in their experience, the session musicians preferred high-resolution capture overwhelmingly, stating that in playback, they found the instruments to sound more like what they heard when actually playing the instruments than did the same material captured at 16/44.1. One British recording engineer from TELDEC stated that harmonically rich instruments like violin, cymbals, and marimbas sound threadbare and missing in harmonic richness when captured at standard CD resolution. He used an example that when these instruments are playing, there are harmonically related ultrasonic sounds at say, 24 KHz and 27 KHz (chosen as an example to illustrate the point) that "beat" in the air to form a 3KHz difference signal and without good wide-band recordings, these harmonically related "beats" are lost in playback. I wanted to ask this guy after the session "if this 3KHz difference signal is formed in the air of the venue between the instrument and the microphone, was it not simply picked up by the microphone at that time? Certainly, any good condenser mike can pick-up any 3KHz sound in the room and even 16-bit/44.1 KHz can certainly quantize it, why does he feel that it is necessary for the process to preserve the ultrasonic harmonics that form this "beat" frequency?" But he got away from me before I was able to catch up with him. All in all a very enlightening and interesting paper. I have a copy of it and believe me I will study it carefully of the next few days to glean as much as possible from it. I mis one little detail here, a listening session with results. Edmund |
#3
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On Sat, 6 Nov 2010 10:12:18 -0700, Edmund wrote
(in article ): "Audio Empire" wrote in message ... Attended an AES seminar today given by John Vanderkooy of the University of Waterloo, Waterloo Ontario entitled: "A Digital-Domain Listening Test for High-Resolution Audio" Vanderkooy maintained that he has no doubt, after many ABX and DB tests performed at the University that "...some people can, reliably, and in a statistically meaningful way, detect the differences between 16-bit, 44.1 KHz audio and the same program material recorded at 24-bit and 176.4 or 192 KHz." He also added that there are also many people who CANNOT hear these differences in a statistically meaningful way, so the jury is still out on the efficacy or need for high-resolution digital audio. Several comments made by Mr Vanderkooy that I found very interesting: (1) He felt that 44.1 KHz was chosen too hastily as the standard and that the industry would have done better to settle on 48 KHz. (2) If one is mastering in high-resolution with an eye to the resultant product being Redbook CD, then it would be better to use 176.4 Khz than to use 192 KHz because 176.4 is an exact multiple of 44.1. During the Q&A session which followed Mr. Vanderkooy's presentation, a number of recording engineers in the audience voiced opinions about working with high-resolution masters. Several said that in their experience, the session musicians preferred high-resolution capture overwhelmingly, stating that in playback, they found the instruments to sound more like what they heard when actually playing the instruments than did the same material captured at 16/44.1. One British recording engineer from TELDEC stated that harmonically rich instruments like violin, cymbals, and marimbas sound threadbare and missing in harmonic richness when captured at standard CD resolution. He used an example that when these instruments are playing, there are harmonically related ultrasonic sounds at say, 24 KHz and 27 KHz (chosen as an example to illustrate the point) that "beat" in the air to form a 3KHz difference signal and without good wide-band recordings, these harmonically related "beats" are lost in playback. I wanted to ask this guy after the session "if this 3KHz difference signal is formed in the air of the venue between the instrument and the microphone, was it not simply picked up by the microphone at that time? Certainly, any good condenser mike can pick-up any 3KHz sound in the room and even 16-bit/44.1 KHz can certainly quantize it, why does he feel that it is necessary for the process to preserve the ultrasonic harmonics that form this "beat" frequency?" But he got away from me before I was able to catch up with him. All in all a very enlightening and interesting paper. I have a copy of it and believe me I will study it carefully of the next few days to glean as much as possible from it. I mis one little detail here, a listening session with results. Edmund It was a presentation of an AES paper about listening test methodology for high-resolution, There were no listening sessions conducted at that time. |
#4
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Audio Empire wrote:
Attended an AES seminar today given by John Vanderkooy of the University of Waterloo, Waterloo Ontario entitled: "A Digital-Domain Listening Test for High-Resolution Audio" Vanderkooy maintained that he has no doubt, after many ABX and DB tests performed at the University that "...some people can, reliably, and in a statistically meaningful way, detect the differences between 16-bit, 44.1 KHz audio and the same program material recorded at 24-bit and 176.4 or 192 KHz." He also added that there are also many people who CANNOT hear these differences in a statistically meaningful way, so the jury is still out on the efficacy or need for high-resolution digital audio. Interesting. It's probably not the wordlength, for reasons that Vanderkooy himself and Lip****z explained in their classic paper: the only difference would (in theory) be a slight rasing of the noise floor. So, more probably it's the sample rate. Maybe a few people have hearing above 22kHz, and this is significant in the tests. Maybe it's the anti-alias filtering, but these days the filters can be made almost arbitrarily good, so I think that's rather unlikely. But there's one other possibility: the ear itself is significantly nonlinear. If you were to play the 24kHz and 27kHz signals at a high level, a difference tone might well be audible. Andrew. |
#5
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On Sun, 7 Nov 2010 06:18:28 -0800, ScottW wrote
(in article ): On Nov 6, 8:21=A0am, Audio Empire wrote: Attended an AES seminar today given by John Vanderkooy of the University = of Waterloo, Waterloo Ontario entitled: "A Digital-Domain Listening Test for High-Resolution Audio" Vanderkooy maintained that he has no doubt, after many ABX and DB tests performed at the University that "...some people can, reliably, and in a statistically meaningful way, detect the differences between 16-bit, 44.1= KHz audio and the same program material recorded at 24-bit and 176.4 or 192 K= Hz." =A0He also added that there are also many people who CANNOT hear these differences in a statistically meaningful way, so the jury is still out o= n the efficacy or need for high-resolution digital audio. Several comments made by Mr Vanderkooy that I found very interesting: (1)= He felt that 44.1 KHz was chosen too hastily as the standard and that the industry would have done better to settle on 48 KHz. (2) If one is master= ing in high-resolution with an eye to the resultant product being Redbook CD, then it would be better to use 176.4 Khz than to use 192 KHz because 176.= 4 is an exact multiple of 44.1. Did he say recording and mastering in hi-rez with a final redbook product is also audible? That is, IMO, the important question. No. That wasn't discussed, but my experience says no. There are real reasons for recording in hi-res. It allows for more headroom of course, and this is useful in production. Also, the more bits, the smaller the quantization error, and low quantization error means lower distortion and smaller amounts of random white noise that gets generated by the process and added to the recording. Translating hi-res to RedBook "normalizes" the headroom, of course (most translation software does this automatically ), but the advantages in quantization error reduction are lost during the translation from more smaller "steps" to fewer larger ones. |
#6
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"Audio Empire" wrote in message
Attended an AES seminar today given by John Vanderkooy of the University of Waterloo, Waterloo Ontario entitled: "A Digital-Domain Listening Test for High-Resolution Audio" Vanderkooy maintained that he has no doubt, after many ABX and DB tests performed at the University that "...some people can, reliably, and in a statistically meaningful way, detect the differences between 16-bit, 44.1 KHz audio and the same program material recorded at 24-bit and 176.4 or 192 KHz." He also added that there are also many people who CANNOT hear these differences in a statistically meaningful way, so the jury is still out on the efficacy or need for high-resolution digital audio. Several comments made by Mr Vanderkooy that I found very interesting: (1) He felt that 44.1 KHz was chosen too hastily as the standard and that the industry would have done better to settle on 48 KHz. (2) If one is mastering in high-resolution with an eye to the resultant product being Redbook CD, then it would be better to use 176.4 Khz than to use 192 KHz because 176.4 is an exact multiple of 44.1. I sent a copy of the above to John Vanderkooy, and his private emailed reply included the word "misquote", and not in a good way. Suffice it to say that the above in no way represents the talk that he thought he gave. |
#7
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On Sun, 7 Nov 2010 19:40:14 -0800, Arny Krueger wrote
(in article ): "Audio Empire" wrote in message Attended an AES seminar today given by John Vanderkooy of the University of Waterloo, Waterloo Ontario entitled: "A Digital-Domain Listening Test for High-Resolution Audio" Vanderkooy maintained that he has no doubt, after many ABX and DB tests performed at the University that "...some people can, reliably, and in a statistically meaningful way, detect the differences between 16-bit, 44.1 KHz audio and the same program material recorded at 24-bit and 176.4 or 192 KHz." He also added that there are also many people who CANNOT hear these differences in a statistically meaningful way, so the jury is still out on the efficacy or need for high-resolution digital audio. Several comments made by Mr Vanderkooy that I found very interesting: (1) He felt that 44.1 KHz was chosen too hastily as the standard and that the industry would have done better to settle on 48 KHz. (2) If one is mastering in high-resolution with an eye to the resultant product being Redbook CD, then it would be better to use 176.4 Khz than to use 192 KHz because 176.4 is an exact multiple of 44.1. I sent a copy of the above to John Vanderkooy, and his private emailed reply included the word "misquote", and not in a good way. Suffice it to say that the above in no way represents the talk that he thought he gave. That's funny. I have a recording of the paper he gave, and all of those things were said in the course of the event by him and the others mentioned. |
#8
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Arny Krueger wrote:
"Audio Empire" wrote in message I sent a copy of the above to John Vanderkooy, and his private emailed reply included the word "misquote", and not in a good way. Suffice it to say that the above in no way represents the talk that he thought he gave. I'm sure we all look forward to seeing the paper. I hope that someone will post a link here when it becomes available. Andrew. |
#9
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"Arny Krueger" wrote in message
... "Audio Empire" wrote in message Attended an AES seminar today given by John Vanderkooy of the University of Waterloo, Waterloo Ontario entitled: "A Digital-Domain Listening Test for High-Resolution Audio" Vanderkooy maintained that he has no doubt, after many ABX and DB tests performed at the University that "...some people can, reliably, and in a statistically meaningful way, detect the differences between 16-bit, 44.1 KHz audio and the same program material recorded at 24-bit and 176.4 or 192 KHz." He also added that there are also many people who CANNOT hear these differences in a statistically meaningful way, so the jury is still out on the efficacy or need for high-resolution digital audio. Several comments made by Mr Vanderkooy that I found very interesting: (1) He felt that 44.1 KHz was chosen too hastily as the standard and that the industry would have done better to settle on 48 KHz. (2) If one is mastering in high-resolution with an eye to the resultant product being Redbook CD, then it would be better to use 176.4 Khz than to use 192 KHz because 176.4 is an exact multiple of 44.1. I sent a copy of the above to John Vanderkooy, and his private emailed reply included the word "misquote", and not in a good way. Suffice it to say that the above in no way represents the talk that he thought he gave. How about telling us what was misquoted. Denial by assertion and vague reference just doesn't work. |
#10
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"Harry Lavo" wrote in message
"Arny Krueger" wrote in message ... "Audio Empire" wrote in message Attended an AES seminar today given by John Vanderkooy of the University of Waterloo, Waterloo Ontario entitled: "A Digital-Domain Listening Test for High-Resolution Audio" Vanderkooy maintained that he has no doubt, after many ABX and DB tests performed at the University that "...some people can, reliably, and in a statistically meaningful way, detect the differences between 16-bit, 44.1 KHz audio and the same program material recorded at 24-bit and 176.4 or 192 KHz." He also added that there are also many people who CANNOT hear these differences in a statistically meaningful way, so the jury is still out on the efficacy or need for high-resolution digital audio. Several comments made by Mr Vanderkooy that I found very interesting: (1) He felt that 44.1 KHz was chosen too hastily as the standard and that the industry would have done better to settle on 48 KHz. (2) If one is mastering in high-resolution with an eye to the resultant product being Redbook CD, then it would be better to use 176.4 Khz than to use 192 KHz because 176.4 is an exact multiple of 44.1. I sent a copy of the above to John Vanderkooy, and his private emailed reply included the word "misquote", and not in a good way. Suffice it to say that the above in no way represents the talk that he thought he gave. How about telling us what was misquoted. I don't have access to the origional text or any recording of what was said a the session. So I can't tell you exactly what was misquoted, only that the speaker says that certain statements are misquotes of what he said. Denial by assertion and vague reference just doesn't work. My only assertion is empirical and inarguable: I forewarded certain text that was posted on RAHE and this was the origional speaker's response. There's nothing vague about the text that I referenced, since I reproduced it in its entirety. |
#11
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On Mon, 8 Nov 2010 16:51:00 -0800, Dick Pierce wrote
(in article ): Arny Krueger wrote: "Audio Empire" wrote in message Attended an AES seminar today given by John Vanderkooy of the University of Waterloo, Waterloo Ontario entitled: "A Digital-Domain Listening Test for High-Resolution Audio" Vanderkooy maintained that he has no doubt, after many ABX and DB tests performed at the University that "...some people can, ... Several comments made by Mr Vanderkooy that I found very interesting: ... I sent a copy of the above to John Vanderkooy, and his private emailed reply included the word "misquote", and not in a good way. Suffice it to say that the above in no way represents the talk that he thought he gave. Well, without seeing the alledged quote from Mr. Vanderkooy, or withoutn hearing from Mr. Vanderkooy himself, I would have to say that this constitutes unsubstantiated hearsay. We all know the accepted conventions about publically quoting private emails withoutbthe author's permission. The problem is that if you accept such conventions, then, in the public space, those quotes can't and thus don't exist. Saying he said something without revealing exactly what he said is of little if any use. And I understand quite well if Mr. Vanderkooy might not want to address these points directly on this forum, given what a sewer hole high-end audio discussions often quickly degenerate in to. All that being said, I would say I have to dismiss any claims of the content of private communications without actual attributable quotes or direct participation as rumor or hearsay, at best at the same level as claims of hearing things under non-rigorous conditions: anecdotal. In this discussion, the same rogor should be applied to all claims, otherwise it's whatever anyone says that goes. Good point. I concur. However, I do strongly suggest that interested parties read Mr. Vanderkooy's paper #8203 " A Digital Domain Listening Test for High Resolution". Although his spoken words at the presentation, (not to mention his comments during the Q&A session that followed) are. of course, somewhat different than the written words in the paper, the paper, nonetheless is very interesting and informative, and explains his position quite well. |
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