Record producer says CD quality isn't good enough

by jessica.lam | June 11, 2008 at 10:28 am | 308 views | 4 comments

Producer T Bone Burnett is making the case that digital music is losing it's sound quality, especially cd's.

Burnett's no fan of CDs or downloads, stating that CD's inadequate sampling rate loses too much of the sound he heard while making and mixing records. He put it this way, "We've been fighting digital sound since it came out twenty years ago...music's gotten to a place that's harder to listen to."

Wow, the guy sounds like an audiophile to me, and he goes on about the degradation of sound from what he heard in the studio, "It's stepped down from tape to digital to compressed digital, so people are now listening to a Xerox of a Polaroid of a photograph of a painting." Tell it brother, but it's interesting Burnett never brought up vinyl or analog, though he did mention that it's only in the last few years that digital's gotten really good. I agree.

Digital losses have all taken their toll on the way people relate to music, so it's mostly background to other activities instead of the primary focus. Digitized sound is diluted to the point is ceases to connect with people on a visceral level. It's just there, a ghostly shadow of its original intent.

To fix the problem Burnett wants his future projects, like the new John Mellencamp album he produced that's due in July, to come out on DVD-Audio, with a bevy of formats including 24 bit/96 kHz WAV files, uncompressed 16bit/44.1kHz files, AAC, and MP3, so you can pick the level of fidelity that works for you. Burnett claims you'll finally get to hear the music as he intended when he made the record in the first place. "It's all part of what makes music feel good."

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vjsaxena

Compact disc manufactued by the nature (no man made machine used).. A spider's web , Camping trip-Mount Madona (Apr08)

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beyondrecords

This is side one of the first disk of a two record set called Malcolm X "The Last Message". "The Last Message" was recorded on February 14, 1965 at the Ford Auditorium in Detroit, Michigan.

This recording is the audio documentation together with an original issue event program booklet that was published to commemorate the awards event that the recording documents on February 14, 1965 at which Malcolm X gave this “last message” just 7 days before his assassination on February 21, 1965. This event occured the very same night that Malcolm X (or El Hajj Malik El Shabazz as was his preferred name at this time) had his home firebombed. According to his own words in the speech that he gave that evening, because of the damage his home suffered that night, he was not wearing his customary coat and tie.

The event at which Malcolm X spoke that night was actually an awards event called the "First Annual Dignity Projection and Scholarships Award Night" sponsored by the Afro American Broadcasting Company. The event was attended by famous people in the African American community such as Rosa Parks, instigator of the 1955 Montgomery, Alabama Bus Boycott. The event was complete with live music provided by the Dorothy Ashby Trio as well as the Cowell, Martin and Ashton Trio. The night consisted partly of famous persons being honored for their achievements including Rosa Parks, Sidney Poitier, and Marion Anderson. Malcolm X was the scheduled keynote and final speaker for that evening.

From reading page three of this event program it has been determined that the "Afro American Broadcasting Company" was an African American organization that was formed in 1964 primarily to produce radio programs that "met with our approval as spiritually free black people". The organization began in 1964 to produce and distribute its own radio programs about the African American experience to radio stations throughout the northeastern United States. The organization was formed in response to dissatisfaction in the African American community with the content and character of radio programs produced about African Americans on "white radio stations". The purpose of the event held that Valentine's Day in 1965 was to raise money by selling tickets to the event itself. The money was to be used to provide scholarships to Afro American youth to enter the field of "mass communications". Malcolm X was particularly interested in supporting the African American media at this time because he recognized the importance of his speeches being accurately reported to the public by the media which would explain his supporting this organization.

History would determine that this was to be Malcolm X's last major public speech. It was given that night at the Ford Auditorium in Detroit, Michigan on Feb 14, 1965.

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seeks2follow

Water on a disk, not much to say.

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monophon

http://flickr.com/photos/monophon

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June 11, 2008 at 10:28 am by jessica.lam, 308 views, 4 comments

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