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Petrovsk Mizinski
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Joined: December 24 2007
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Topic: Metallica's Death Magnetic Wave Form Analysis Posted: September 12 2008 at 03:19 |
Something I saw on another forum which really captured my attention.
The leaked version of Cyanide.... pretty damn compressed.
The retail version.
Basically a solid bar waveform, meaning about 0dB deviation (if any at all of some sections of what we see in the waveform are anything to go by) in the volume and dynamic range of the audio(err, if someone can explain that more technically than I can, feel free btw ).
This is another reason I don't want to get this album... it must be one of the loudest (which can clip audio signals more easily, resulting undesirable distortion ) and most compressed albums ever made
Edited by HughesJB4 - September 12 2008 at 05:31
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MikeEnRegalia
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Posted: September 12 2008 at 03:25 |
It's a loud track ... it doesn't have extended silent parts or interludes. I don't think that such a condensed view, where the whole track fits one screen, shows whether it's too compressed. Today I'll buy the album ... I'll post the album gain as soon as I have it in winamp.
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Petrovsk Mizinski
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Joined: December 24 2007
Location: Ukraine
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Posted: September 12 2008 at 03:35 |
^Well I used to use Nero Wave editor.... and I never saw a single song (even some of the most compressed stuff I had like Systematic Chaos... which is pretty damn compresssed) didn't form solid bar wave forms.
If you could take the time too (since I have no intentions of purchasing Death Magnetic), could you perhaps use Audacity (which is what I use instead of Nero Wave Editor, so it will help me to see thing in a perspective I'm more used too), and perhaps, compare the wave forms of some of the most compressed albums you own, and compare them to Death Magnetic?
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npjnpj
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Joined: December 05 2007
Location: Germany
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Posted: September 12 2008 at 04:12 |
Well, I've listened to the album several times now, and wave analysis or not, at last a Metallica album worth getting. Although interesting in a WTF way, it goes to show that thankfully some weird graph can't really influence my enjoyment of stuff I like.
I mean, come on! Is the picture of a wave form really going to be a criterium on which buying an album is based?
Edited by npjnpj - September 12 2008 at 04:30
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cobb2
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Posted: September 12 2008 at 05:14 |
The studios have hardware compressor/limiters that allow them to get away with this type of boosting, without distorting - don't try it at home. It may turn out sounding like mud. And to those who said it is not necessary to master, in the mastering thread I put up, that is where this is done.
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Petrovsk Mizinski
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Joined: December 24 2007
Location: Ukraine
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Points: 25210
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Posted: September 12 2008 at 05:30 |
^I understand the actual recording itself can be compressed to hell
without any actual what we perceive as distortion to the signal.
What I meant, was that, a heavily compressed album has the capacity to
make the audio signal being sent to your speakers clip much easier than
a less compressed album.
You can certainly crank an audio player to full volume with a less
compressed album and it probably wont do any harm to the speakers...
problem with excessively compressed recordings in the case of Death
Magnetic, not only will turning up the audio system to full be highly
likely to cause the signal to create clipping by the time it hits the
speakers, but you can potentially damage your speakers.
Of course, someone like me, cobb2, MikeEnRegalia et al understand this and wouldn't go and crank an album with massive compression at full volume, but what about people that don't understand these sort of concepts? It wont be any fun for them having to replace speakers because they turned up the volume to full with a stupidly over compressed album playing.
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cobb2
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Posted: September 12 2008 at 07:05 |
No, this won't distort- distortion occurs outside the +-3db range- the top and bottom of the graph. This is the job of the limiter- to remove any signals that go outside this range. They are just chopped off- removed entirely. Without the limiter this wave file would distort to hell. So, the compressor boosts the signal and the limiter removes anything outside the range of (most) playback units- louder music with no distortion. But as I said earlier this can only be done at this level with very expensive hardware gear, not software. The true meaning of DAW- a software workstation interacting with hardware effects. To get an idea think of the guitar and the effects pedal. The pedal is hardware and can do a much better job of controlling the signal that it is designed for, than say the software filters in a Pro Music Suite package. Even though they might be doing exactly the same thing, your guitar distortion (or whatever) is gonna sound better using a pedal, not a software effect filter.
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Petrovsk Mizinski
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Posted: September 12 2008 at 09:28 |
Yeah, that's what I meant though. The actual recording itself, isn't distorting. Death Magnetic may be very well be distortion free (an unclipped signal).. I don't imagine they would be putting a distorted sounding album on the market. An inherent feature of audio systems, is that the electronics themselves can produce distortion (a concept you may understand more than me, and something I'm sure some people on PA understand a lot more than me) and the speakers themselves, as I stated earlier.can be pushed into distortion. The more expensive high end units are obviously less prone to doing so, in terms of the electronics side of things, and generally louder wattage power amps deliver more headroom, allowing for more volume before distortion/clipping (with speakers to match of course). I guess that can be a lesson 101, for those not in the know What I really wanted to put across was that because of the extremely compressed audio of Death Magnetic, speakers and the audio systems themselves which are not free of distortion (unlike the album itself presumably) will be pushed into clipping more quickly because of the extra signal gain. I mean, sure enough if I have my computer speakers at a reasonable volume they wont distort, whether I put on Opeth's Ghost Reveries (an example of a record with a very good dynamic range and as a given, not heavily compressed at all) or listen to Death Magnetic.... put them on full volume and they will, as a result of them just being small speakers with a low power amp. Putting on Death Magnetic will only exacerbate the clipping problems at high volumes in my speakers.
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Petrovsk Mizinski
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Joined: December 24 2007
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Posted: September 12 2008 at 09:31 |
Solid bar wave forms are apparently something joked about...... no one actually expected it would be for real, but I guess the production team behind Death Magnetic weren't aware of that joke and well...... did it for real.
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MikeEnRegalia
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Posted: September 12 2008 at 10:02 |
^ I now have the cd ... so far it sounds good. Album Gain is at -13.20, which suggests heavy compression, but I've also seen a few albums which exceeded -14 ...
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Petrovsk Mizinski
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Posted: September 12 2008 at 23:56 |
^Thanks for that info Mike
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mystic fred
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Posted: September 13 2008 at 03:52 |
i have ordered the x2 vinyl copy of this album, will be interesting to see how the wave forms pan out on that
Edited by mystic fred - September 13 2008 at 03:53
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MikeEnRegalia
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Posted: September 13 2008 at 04:25 |
^ how much did it cost? At Amazon.de I only see the €69 special limited whatnot edition, which I am definitely not buying. I'm not going to spend more than €25 for the album.
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inrainbows
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Joined: February 20 2008
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Posted: September 13 2008 at 05:07 |
Representatives for Metallica acknowledged the mastering problem
"My name is Benjamin. I work in fan support for Mission: Metallica.
"I am sorry for the bulk e-mail, but we've heard from quite a few of you regarding the sound quality on the single release of 'The Day That Never Comes'.
"The source of the problem, as you might imagine, goes all the way back to the creation of the track from master — but this is not how it will sound on the album."
Metallica knew of the problem, had a representative state that it would be fixed, and still allowed it to ship with the problem. I would assume that the problem was identified too late in the manufacturing process of the disc and they let it go.
Here you can find a petition,asking for album remastering, which is terribly clipping:
http://www.gopetition.co.uk/online/21800.html
Edited by inrainbows - September 13 2008 at 05:20
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MikeEnRegalia
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Posted: September 13 2008 at 05:10 |
well, yesterday I listened to the album on my mobile player on the way back from work ... I noticed that the bass was distorted even at my normal volume setting (18/25). I'll listen on the computer today (Logitech speakers) and on my hi-fi.
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inrainbows
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Joined: February 20 2008
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Posted: September 13 2008 at 05:23 |
MikeEnRegalia wrote:
well, yesterday I listened to the album on my mobile player on the way back from work ... I noticed that the bass was distorted even at my normal volume setting (18/25). I'll listen on the computer today (Logitech speakers) and on my hi-fi.
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Believe me, that's the same sh*t.If only I could hear it without annoying myself to the horrible sound. For me, the bad quality really is f**king up my listening experience. Good music and decent recordings make me want to turn up the volume. I caught myself wanting to turn DOWN the volume on as well as my portable as my (quite nice, one might add) home set. Now, an album that makes me want to turn DOWN the volume can't be right.
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fashionimage
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Joined: September 13 2008
Location: california
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Posted: September 13 2008 at 05:27 |
I Bought the cd and encoded it using itunes 192kbs mp3 it sounds good on my itunes but it sounds absolutely horrible on any of my ipods and iphone it is very distorted on the ipods even at low volume really really bad i can not listen because the clipping is so bad
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inrainbows
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Posted: September 13 2008 at 05:44 |
fashionimage wrote:
I Bought the cd and encoded it using itunes 192kbs mp3 it sounds good on my itunes but it sounds absolutely horrible on any of my ipods and iphone it is very distorted on the ipods even at low volume really really bad i can not listen because the clipping is so bad |
Agree. Just spread this around : http://www.gopetition.co.uk/online/21800.html We
got Metallica to release the Live Sh*t box set on DVD last year, so you
never know.
Edited by inrainbows - September 13 2008 at 05:44
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mystic fred
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Posted: September 13 2008 at 08:21 |
MikeEnRegalia wrote:
^ how much did it cost? At Amazon.de I only see the €69 special limited whatnot edition, which I am definitely not buying. I'm not going to spend more than €25 for the album. |
it is advertised on USA Amazon for $14.99, but have since informed me of a delay....are they pulling my thingy..?
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MikeEnRegalia
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Posted: September 13 2008 at 08:23 |
I hate when the vinyl release is delayed ...
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