Right....so, should I just stick to FhG? or Blade? I find that with classical music, it sounds ultra-high in treble when it comes to classical music
Right....so, should I just stick to FhG? or Blade? I find that with classical music, it sounds ultra-high in treble when it comes to classical music
Again...It depends...
On your purpose =)
New lame (3.96, 3.97alpha) great for making extremely-low -16-64kbps
bitrate files(ebooks for instance), while FhG acts way better imo
on higher bitrates - 192kbps and so on...
Imho, when possible, it's better to use some newer and
more advanced solutions, like aac.
PS.: Main rule in coding audio - is to stay as close
as possible to the original sound.
Last edited by Larry!; 04-14-2005 at 01:43 PM.
All mp3 codecs put artifacts in songs.
Lame seems to put static in. This is especially noticable at silent parts of a track. At lower bitrates this is expected with all codecs, but it should not happen at high bitrates. Lame is best at low-mid bitrates.
Blade's artifact is a reverb-like effect at low-mid bitrates. The effect disappears at high bitrates. You should not use Blade at bitrates lower than 192kbps.
I don't know enough about Fhg to make any comparisons to blade and lame.
You know what? Based on your descriptions, Link500X, mp3 encoders just suck in general. I'm not trying to offend what you said or anything, but I'm beginning to think about abandoning mp3 and moving on to ogg vorbis and aac.....
Yes, MP3 does pretty much suck. OGG is much better, but the best lossy codec is MPC. Many people just use MP3 because alot of hardware(cd players, mp3 players, etc.) supports it. There are a few cd players that support OGG, but I don't know of any that support MPC.
Ok, i have to say sum to keep this offtopic on XD
that properly encoded mp3 at reasonable bitrate(192 and up)
even with lame enc sounds good enough for me...
I'm not an audioexpert though.
Have you done ABX testing, Larry! ?
Nah... Just the oldfashioned sound-to-ear testing, kid.
lol. cool.Originally Posted by Larry!
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