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#1
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How to tell "true" wave files
Is there any software to tell whether an audio track was actually
converted from an MP3 or WMA file, rather than ripped from a CD? |
#2
Posted to rec.audio.pro
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How to tell "true" wave files
In article ,
Dennis Q. Wilson wrote: Is there any software to tell whether an audio track was actually converted from an MP3 or WMA file, rather than ripped from a CD? If your ears won't tell you, looking at a spectrogram probably will. If you see big blocky squares... that's a sign of compression. --scott -- "C'est un Nagra. C'est suisse, et tres, tres precis." |
#3
Posted to rec.audio.pro
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How to tell "true" wave files
"Dennis Q. Wilson" wrote in
message Is there any software to tell whether an audio track was actually converted from an MP3 or WMA file, rather than ripped from a CD? AFAIK, detecting a MP3 is a study in audio forensics. You collect evidence and infer a conclusion from it. Two kinds of evidence that are fairly reliable: (1) Spectrogram shows a brick-wall roll-off, often at 16 KHz (2) MP3 frames are usually 417 or 418 bytes, so a wav file that is based on an MP3 should be an integer number of frames long. If the bitrate was low enough, the poor fidelity is more evidence. |
#4
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How to tell "true" wave files
"Dennis Q. Wilson" wrote in message
... Is there any software to tell whether an audio track was actually converted from an MP3 or WMA file, rather than ripped from a CD? Probably the easiest way is to use a program which has a spectrum analyzer. (Adobe Audition is one, there are many others.) If there's a sharp cutoff at around 15kHz then the file came from a lowish-bit-rate .mp3 or .wma file. If the original was high-bitrate, though, it's harder to tell. Peace, Paul |
#5
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How to tell "true" wave files
On Tue, 6 May 2008 11:24:32 -0700 (PDT), "Dennis Q. Wilson"
wrote: Is there any software to tell whether an audio track was actually converted from an MP3 or WMA file, rather than ripped from a CD? Have a look at this: http://81.174.169.10/odds/identmp3.gif It is the spectrogram of a few seconds of music on a CD, followed by the same piece following 256k conversion to MP3. The differences are obvious, the main one being the complete lack of low level detail above 16kHz - only the peaks are showing. Apart from that, the whole appearance of the MP3 section is more granular which is evidence of the amount of data you can discard because it is masked. Audibly, the two pieces are essentially identical. The piece I have used is opera with virtually no amplitude compression - that being the kind of stuff that MP3 does best; it really doesn't like having to cope with hypercompressed pop music that doesn't contain the kind of low level detail that can be masked away. Anyway, what this shows is that visually it is very easy to tell a file that has been through MP3 conversion from one that hasn't. d -- Pearce Consulting http://www.pearce.uk.com |
#6
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How to tell "true" wave files
Dennis Q. Wilson schreef:
Is there any software to tell whether an audio track was actually converted from an MP3 or WMA file, rather than ripped from a CD? To add to the others' good advice, here is one trick. In the audio application of your choice, open the track, then flip the left and right channels, then invert the phase. Then play this together with the original track. If the original track has been compressed to a low bit rate somewhere along the way, you will hear artifacts all over the place. HTH Jos. -- Ardis Park Music www.ardispark.nl |
#7
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How to tell "true" wave files
On May 6, 4:23*pm, (Don Pearce) wrote:
On Tue, 6 May 2008 11:24:32 -0700 (PDT), "Dennis Q. Wilson" wrote: Is there any software to tell whether an audio track was actually converted from an MP3 or WMA file, rather than ripped from a CD? Have a look at this: http://81.174.169.10/odds/identmp3.gif It is the spectrogram of a few seconds of music on a CD, followed by the same piece following 256k conversion to MP3. The differences are obvious, the main one being the complete lack of low level detail above 16kHz - only the peaks are showing. Apart from that, the whole appearance of the MP3 section is more granular which is evidence of the amount of data you can discard because it is masked. Audibly, the two pieces are essentially identical. The piece I have used is opera with virtually no amplitude compression - that being the kind of stuff that MP3 does best; it really doesn't like having to cope with hypercompressed pop music that doesn't contain the kind of low level detail that can be masked away. Anyway, what this shows is that visually it is very easy to tell a file that has been through MP3 conversion from one that hasn't. d -- Pearce Consultinghttp://www.pearce.uk.com hey look at that! the MP3 got rid of all the hiss :-) Mark |
#8
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How to tell "true" wave files
On May 6, 11:24*am, "Dennis Q. Wilson"
wrote: Is there any software to tell whether an audio track was actually converted from an MP3 or WMA file, rather than ripped from a CD? Thank you, one and all. I have come away from this exchange with a lot of solid, practical information. |
#9
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How to tell "true" wave files
On May 6, 2:37 pm, Jos Geluk wrote:
Dennis Q. Wilson schreef: Is there any software to tell whether an audio track was actually converted from an MP3 or WMA file, rather than ripped from a CD? To add to the others' good advice, here is one trick. In the audio application of your choice, open the track, then flip the left and right channels, then invert the phase. Then play this together with the original track. If the original track has been compressed to a low bit rate somewhere along the way, you will hear artifacts all over the place. HTH Jos. -- Ardis Park Musicwww.ardispark.nl I discovered that one while knocking out vocals. The Mp3's have phasing artifacts all over the place and the vocals don't disappear. |
#10
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How to tell "true" wave files
"Mark" wrote in message
On May 6, 4:23 pm, (Don Pearce) wrote: On Tue, 6 May 2008 11:24:32 -0700 (PDT), "Dennis Q. Wilson" wrote: Is there any software to tell whether an audio track was actually converted from an MP3 or WMA file, rather than ripped from a CD? Have a look at this: http://81.174.169.10/odds/identmp3.gif It is the spectrogram of a few seconds of music on a CD, followed by the same piece following 256k conversion to MP3. The differences are obvious, the main one being the complete lack of low level detail above 16kHz - only the peaks are showing. Agreed and expected. Apart from that, the whole appearance of the MP3 section is more granular which is evidence of the amount of data you can discard because it is masked. I don't see that at all. What I see is the usual granular nature of a spectrogram with the parameters used. Audibly, the two pieces are essentially identical. The piece I have used is opera with virtually no amplitude compression - that being the kind of stuff that MP3 does best; it really doesn't like having to cope with hypercompressed pop music that doesn't contain the kind of low level detail that can be masked away. Anyway, what this shows is that visually it is very easy to tell a file that has been through MP3 conversion from one that hasn't. hey look at that! the MP3 got rid of all the hiss :-) I wish. Audible hiss is usually above -60 dB, and down in the 4 KHz range where the ear is most sensitive. IME, a 256K MP3 pretty well preserves low level detail down into the -60 dB range, so its not going to remove audible hiss, and its not going to producw a spectrogram with appreciable visible changes due to the removal of low-level detail. |
#11
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How to tell "true" wave files
In article ,
Dennis Q. Wilson wrote: Is there any software to tell whether an audio track was actually converted from an MP3 or WMA file, rather than ripped from a CD? snip There are several software apps that purport to do exactly that. "Trader's Little Helper" is one. I'm guessing that they work by looking for the same characteristics mentioned elsewhere in this thread. This is a big deal in the lossless live music trading community, where polluting the dataspace with lossy compressed sources is strictly verboten. Peace Art |
#12
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How to tell "true" wave files
hey look at that! the MP3 got rid of all the hiss * :-) I wish. Audible hiss is usually above -60 dB, and down in the 4 KHz range where the ear is most sensitive. IME, a 256K MP3 pretty well preserves low level detail down into the -60 dB range, so its not going to remove audible hiss, and its not going to producw a spectrogram *with appreciable visible changes due to the removal of low-level detail.- Arnie... I fully agree, I was just trying to be funny... I have tried A/B comparisons several times and I have not ever heard any difference between an original and a 256K MP3. At 128K they can get swishy... Mark |
#13
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How to tell "true" wave files
Mark wrote:
I have tried A/B comparisons several times and I have not ever heard any difference between an original and a 256K MP3. Listen for stereo imaging changes. If you have a good speaker system that actually images properly, it is very interesting to hear what the encoder does to the stereo field. Stuff starts moving around. At 128K they can get swishy... Yes, that's when it starts to get _really_ nasty. --scott -- "C'est un Nagra. C'est suisse, et tres, tres precis." |
#14
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How to tell "true" wave files
Scott Dorsey wrote:
Mark wrote: I have tried A/B comparisons several times and I have not ever heard any difference between an original and a 256K MP3. Listen for stereo imaging changes. If you have a good speaker system that actually images properly, it is very interesting to hear what the encoder does to the stereo field. Stuff starts moving around. At 128K they can get swishy... Yes, that's when it starts to get _really_ nasty. And that's what most of them are.... geoff |
#15
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How to tell "true" wave files
"Teddy D'Bear" wrote in
message Do a search for "AudioChecker v1.2 by Dester" I use this to ferret out low quality MP3 rips that people recode to FLAC files. It works reasonably well. Interesting stuff. Home site: http://www.dester.hu/English/main_e.html Core technology: http://www.true-audio.com/Tau_Analyz...ct_Description |
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