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January 08, 2008

The Death of High Fidelity

Robert Levine in Rolling Stone:

Sony_dav150_1David Bendeth, a producer who works with rock bands like Hawthorne Heights and Paramore, knows that the albums he makes are often played through tiny computer speakers by fans who are busy surfing the Internet. So he's not surprised when record labels ask the mastering engineers who work on his CDs to crank up the sound levels so high that even the soft parts sound loud.

Over the past decade and a half, a revolution in recording technology has changed the way albums are produced, mixed and mastered — almost always for the worse. "They make it loud to get [listeners'] attention," Bendeth says. Engineers do that by applying dynamic range compression, which reduces the difference between the loudest and softest sounds in a song. Like many of his peers, Bendeth believes that relying too much on this effect can obscure sonic detail, rob music of its emotional power and leave listeners with what engineers call ear fatigue. "I think most everything is mastered a little too loud," Bendeth says. "The industry decided that it's a volume contest."

Producers and engineers call this "the loudness war," and it has changed the way almost every new pop and rock album sounds.

More here.

Posted by Abbas Raza at 03:42 AM | Permalink

Comments

Frank Zappas of the world, where are you?

Posted by: beajerry | Jan 8, 2008 10:49:54 AM

I'm a little skeptical. Wasn't pop music once engineered for transister radios and cheap home stereos? Today, the most humble MP3 player gives better sound reproduction than previous generations ever enjoyed.

Posted by: instafaggot | Jan 8, 2008 5:11:02 PM

MP3 players can provide good sound quality, if the speakers/headphones one uses are good, but it seems that a lot of iPod users just stick the buds that come with it into their ears, which suggests that they really don't care what the quality of the stuff they listen to is.

As a classical/jazz person, I don't deal with these problems myself, since I use good headphones and the recordings in those fields are made with a lot more care.

Posted by: JonJ | Jan 9, 2008 1:27:00 PM

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