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Big_Grand
Metalhead

Joined: Thu Nov 11, 2010 11:59 pm
Posts: 624
PostPosted: Mon Dec 24, 2012 10:30 pm 
 

That was the label code on the side, sorry. the matrix is 8313 BELOWLIGHT 01

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Tormented666
Mallcore Kid

Joined: Sat Nov 10, 2012 2:56 pm
Posts: 29
Location: Sweden
PostPosted: Tue Dec 25, 2012 4:28 pm 
 

autopsy mental funeral jewelcase version 1991
does not say MASTERED BY NIMBUS, says Ifpi LD02 and ifpi 5J26, VLE 25 N61404 on back Matrixrunout,
VILE 25 CD RT GERMANY 320 0025 2 40 on front disc.
Front disk does not have matrix runout because of printing on whole cd.

UK version?

is this a real pressing I have bought? not to familiar with bootlegs and stuff...

regards
magnus

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dreadmeat
emere vendere cambire

Joined: Sat Oct 04, 2008 4:50 am
Posts: 7886
Location: Auckland, New Zealand
PostPosted: Tue Dec 25, 2012 4:35 pm 
 

the front [of the] disc doesn't have a matrix because it's not the matrix area of the disc.
any chance of some photos or scans? it's not an original from 1991.

that catalogue number [if that's what it is] sounds similar to this cassette
http://www.discogs.com/Autopsy-Mental-Funeral/release/2918384
RT could be Rough Trade perhaps?
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carnival_corpse
Metal newbie

Joined: Sat Jan 16, 2010 1:12 pm
Posts: 282
PostPosted: Wed Dec 26, 2012 10:42 pm 
 

carnival_corpse wrote:
For those collectors out there. I have a copy of Viogression's Passage in Tombstone Records/Progressive International from 1992, however my matrix number has an IFPI code: THE PASSAGE X6829T IFPI L531

Didnt the IFPI codes started to be used in 1994? I will appreciate if any one can confirm if this matrix number is the correct one?



Can someone pl;ease post the matrix number on Viogression's Passage CD?

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dreadmeat
emere vendere cambire

Joined: Sat Oct 04, 2008 4:50 am
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Location: Auckland, New Zealand
PostPosted: Wed Dec 26, 2012 11:41 pm 
 

i just asked for some info on the discogs page [link above] hopefully someone there will add it, hope that helps man.
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pale_horse
Metalhead

Joined: Thu Oct 25, 2012 10:36 am
Posts: 681
Location: United States
PostPosted: Fri Dec 28, 2012 1:43 am 
 

Manufactured by Amazon.com discs:
There had been some discussion in the recent purchases thread about these discs and having received one as a gift, several posters asked me to help elaborate so we could figure out the ins and outs of this thing, so I'll attempt to show what I can here. This deals with CDs ordered from Amazon with this caveat: "CD-R Note: This product is manufactured on demand when ordered from Amazon.com. [Learn more]"

Example: http://www.amazon.com/The-Book-Root/dp/B004KZQ3KW/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1356672512&sr=8-1&keywords=root+the+book

Images of the case/layout here:

Spoiler: show
Image
Laptop camera is not the best. Cover photo is grainy with a border around it. Back of insert is nondescript page with tracklist and name of record label only. No year, list of musicians, anything.

Image
Inside of the insert is totally blank.

Image
Disc obverse. Glossy finish.

Image
Disc reverse. Appears silver to me. Written around inner ring: T80-UG-5, (10312102).

Image
Case reverse. Written above barcode: "Manufactured by Amazon.com (indiscernible: kydc, lyde?) Lexington KY"
Below: 8 8647079501 7


There was a question over whether or not the files were sourced by mp3s or by uncompressed audio, and some users requested I take screen shots of the waveform. They are below. Amazon.com's claim: "CreateSpace works with many of the leading music labels, television networks, film studios, and other distributors to make these titles available to Amazon.com customers. All products are manufactured from original source materials (e.g., for audio products, uncompressed CD-quality audio)."

Spoiler: show
Image
Solarfall

Image
Zoomed in.

I don't know what I'm looking for here, so I hope these are sufficient.
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dreadmeat
emere vendere cambire

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PostPosted: Fri Dec 28, 2012 3:35 am 
 

audacity > analyze > plot spectrum
also on the left there's little arrow, click it and you get some view options, eg spectrogram
excellent work so far
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dreadmeat
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PostPosted: Fri Dec 28, 2012 5:09 am 
 

wav file ripped directly from my shitty arse vengeance rising cd bootleg, whoever made the thing used mp3s or some other such lossy format
notice how the frequencies above 20 k aren't there?

Image

Image

and this dark angel leave scars vinyl rip

Image

Image

farkin heinous!
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pale_horse
Metalhead

Joined: Thu Oct 25, 2012 10:36 am
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Location: United States
PostPosted: Fri Dec 28, 2012 9:42 am 
 

dreadmeat wrote:
audacity > analyze > plot spectrum
also on the left there's little arrow, click it and you get some view options, eg spectrogram
excellent work so far


Plot Spectrum:
Spoiler: show
Image

I ran this three times. Two of the times it looked like this (above), the other time it looked like this:

Image

Maybe an error? I included it for good measure. I should also note that when running the plot spectrum it said I couldn't analyze the full length of audio and selected only the first 200-some seconds.

Certainly appears to drop off slightly after 20k.


Spectrograph:
Spoiler: show
Image


It would be interesting if you had an original copy with this same track for comparison.
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~Guest 82538
Metal freak

Joined: Thu Sep 28, 2006 10:34 am
Posts: 6400
PostPosted: Fri Dec 28, 2012 1:56 pm 
 

vulcan plutarchy wrote:
It would be interesting if you had an original copy with this same track for comparison.

That would certainly make things clearer to everyone who isn't able to read all this raw data. The curve does seem to take a nose dive after the 20Khz mark though.

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japc
Metalhead

Joined: Fri Apr 30, 2004 10:35 pm
Posts: 512
Location: Portugal
PostPosted: Fri Dec 28, 2012 4:37 pm 
 

dreadmeat wrote:
wav file ripped directly from my shitty arse vengeance rising cd bootleg, whoever made the thing used mp3s or some other such lossy format
notice how the frequencies above 20 k aren't there?

Don't know the album but this may be normal (maybe the production is on the dark side), also there's not an abrupt drop on the frequency so it doesn't seem anything out of the ordinary there.

dreadmeat wrote:
and this dark angel leave scars vinyl rip

...
farkin heinous!

Not a fair comparison, the CD format only has frequencies up to 22 kHz while vinyl can go up to 45 kHz. Both are good as freqs > 22 kHz aren't heard unless you're, for instance, a dog, or a cat (well, even vinyl is lacking for cats as they can
cat detect sound all the way up to 64 kHz, and they are pretty damn cute on top of that).
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dreadmeat
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PostPosted: Fri Dec 28, 2012 4:51 pm 
 

re plot spectrum you have two different results because the 'sample size' used was different for each one, 512 and 128
the smaller the sample size the more accurate it'll be [and it'll take longer] i found using a part of the song with a lot of sound eg not the intro gave a better result, i'm not sure why they have it limited to that length, i had a few different limits presented to me about 1 to 2 minutes roughly [their wiki/faq etc likely has the answer]

my first question is: did you rip the cd to wav or mp3?
if you ripped to wav then i think amazon have some *explaining to do, as above there's nothing over 20k?
my vengeance rising cd up there is a bootleg so the jammy fucker probably just used mp3s to burn the disc

"CreateSpace works with many of the leading music labels, television networks, film studios, and other distributors to make these titles available to Amazon.com customers. All products are manufactured from original source materials (e.g., for audio products, *uncompressed CD-quality audio)."

japc sent me this link yesterday, i had a lot of fun playing with this!
i'm far from an expert but this is how i'm reading the info :p
http://www.walterdevos.be/how-to-check-quality-of-mp3-file

another cool thing i did just for a laugh was rip the first song from an original somewhere in time and the same song from the remastered one and compared them.
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dreadmeat
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Location: Auckland, New Zealand
PostPosted: Fri Dec 28, 2012 4:55 pm 
 

addendum, oh look, japc replied at the same time
i agree, cats are cute, but those baby goat videos take some beating :roll:

also i chose the vinyl rip to show the very different results, i'm keen to try a new record with more modern production
and maybe some drum n bass vinyl too, something 100% electronic, just for the fun of it.
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~Guest 82538
Metal freak

Joined: Thu Sep 28, 2006 10:34 am
Posts: 6400
PostPosted: Fri Dec 28, 2012 5:12 pm 
 

japc wrote:
Not a fair comparison, the CD format only has frequencies up to 22 kHz while vinyl can go up to 45 kHz. Both are good as freqs > 22 kHz aren't heard unless you're, for instance, a dog, or a cat (well, even vinyl is lacking for cats as they can
cat detect sound all the way up to 64 kHz, and they are pretty damn cute on top of that).

Actually, CD audio has a sampling rate of 16bit/44Khz, what vinyl has better is a wider dynamic range. Also there's another factor that is the actual bit rate of the MP3 to CD audio conversion, since MP3 has a sampling rate identical to an audio CD. What happens, and is partially explained in that linked article, is that at lower bit rates the codec that compresses the file cuts all frequencies above a certain threshold to save physical space. MP3 at 320Kbps is capable of reproducing the audio perfectly, although the fact that it's a lossy format will make some things be lost as well, although those are the ones which can only be "felt" or heard with really high-end gear, i.e. nothing that would really make that much of a difference. But I don't even want to go down that road because this would rapidly turn into a lossy vs lossless debate. :p

What's important to realize is that if a CD is recorded from a low bit rate MP3 source it will wave a waveform with the higher frequencies completely cut out.

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japc
Metalhead

Joined: Fri Apr 30, 2004 10:35 pm
Posts: 512
Location: Portugal
PostPosted: Fri Dec 28, 2012 7:36 pm 
 

androdion wrote:
Actually, CD audio has a sampling rate of 16bit/44Khz, what vinyl has better is a wider dynamic range.

That's the sampling rate, the Nyquist frequency is half that: 22 kHz.

androdion wrote:
Also there's another factor that is the actual bit rate of the MP3 to CD audio conversion, since MP3 has a sampling rate identical to an audio CD. What happens, and is partially explained in that linked article, is that at lower bit rates the codec that compresses the file cuts all frequencies above a certain threshold to save physical space. MP3 at 320Kbps is capable of reproducing the audio perfectly, although the fact that it's a lossy format will make some things be lost as well, although those are the ones which can only be "felt" or heard with really high-end gear,

For me everything over 192 I can't distinguish from the CD, it was too many years using lowsy chinese shop headphones (soft version of sticking a driller in the ear drum). Which is pretty cool as I can fit more music on the portable player, or rather "would be", because I tend to encode everything with -V0 (320/vbr) anyway with fear of missing something.

According to http://thesession.org/discussions/19642 those damned headphones eroded 2 kHz.
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Last edited by japc on Fri Dec 28, 2012 8:11 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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japc
Metalhead

Joined: Fri Apr 30, 2004 10:35 pm
Posts: 512
Location: Portugal
PostPosted: Fri Dec 28, 2012 8:08 pm 
 

vulcan plutarchy wrote:
It would be interesting if you had an original copy with this same track for comparison

Grabbed my copy of http://www.discogs.com/Immortal-At-The- ... ase/394588, converted Solarfall to WAV and plotted the spectrum in Audacity. The graphic layered over your image with some transparency and slightly shifted, they seem to match flawlessly:

Image
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dreadmeat
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Location: Auckland, New Zealand
PostPosted: Fri Dec 28, 2012 9:07 pm 
 

hmm i was convinced i understood the data i was looking at but i may be a shade foggy still...
i ripped some crappy bootleg cd-r and a couple of legit cd-rs and some mastered [silvered] discs and the results are all the same: 20k as above
the only results that looked a lot different were the vinyl rips :scratch:

the good news is that the amazon discs are at least cd audio quality.
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~Guest 82538
Metal freak

Joined: Thu Sep 28, 2006 10:34 am
Posts: 6400
PostPosted: Fri Dec 28, 2012 10:07 pm 
 

japc wrote:
androdion wrote:
Actually, CD audio has a sampling rate of 16bit/44Khz, what vinyl has better is a wider dynamic range.

That's the sampling rate, the Nyquist frequency is half that: 22 kHz.

I tried reading the Wiki article about the Nyquist frequency but it's like reading Chinese! :D

So in real life all actual audio is only reproduced within the borders of the Nyquist frequency, i.e. half of the original sampling rate? And is that why the graph only shows a curve up until the upper 20Khz?

dreadmeat wrote:
the only results that looked a lot different were the vinyl rips

Reading the last linked article that actually makes sense and comes in line with what I've said before, only low bit rate MP3 sources give out crappy CD-R copies.

I still find it weird that a company would have copyright access to (supposedly) lossless source files of the albums sold by a label. It's a brave new world we're living in!

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japc
Metalhead

Joined: Fri Apr 30, 2004 10:35 pm
Posts: 512
Location: Portugal
PostPosted: Fri Dec 28, 2012 11:01 pm 
 

androdion wrote:
I tried reading the Wiki article about the Nyquist frequency but it's like reading Chinese! :D

Yes, too much info :)

Trimmed versions:

http://mathworld.wolfram.com/NyquistFrequency.html
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sampling_rate
http://en.wikibooks.org/wiki/Analog_and ... pling_Rate
http://www.cs.cf.ac.uk/Dave/Multimedia/node149.html

androdion wrote:
So in real life all actual audio is only reproduced within the borders of the Nyquist frequency, i.e. half of the original sampling rate? And is that why the graph only shows a curve up until the upper 20Khz?

Yes.
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pale_horse
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Joined: Thu Oct 25, 2012 10:36 am
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Location: United States
PostPosted: Sat Dec 29, 2012 1:29 am 
 

dreadmeat wrote:
my first question is: did you rip the cd to wav or mp3?


I did not rip it at all, I loaded it in Audacity directly from the CD. It was listed as AIFF.

Thank you for the image, japc. I'm pretty convinced that these are sourced they way they claim, regardless of the fact that the disc has no collectible or aesthetic value.
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dreadmeat
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Location: Auckland, New Zealand
PostPosted: Sat Dec 29, 2012 2:20 am 
 

i found a couple of threads at discogs if you guys are interested in having a look [of course you are] :grin:

http://www.discogs.com/help/forums/topic/339993
http://www.discogs.com/help/forums/topic/235503

amazon cd-r 'faq' page, which i've bookmarked for later.
http://www.amazon.com/gp/help/customer/display.html?ie=UTF8&nodeId=200326640
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dreadmeat
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PostPosted: Sat Dec 29, 2012 6:24 pm 
 

so if i'm reading this correctly there appears to be no way to tell if a cd has been burned from mp3 files or wav files or flac or indeed even mastered [made from the original master, i'm unsure of the actual terminology]
because they all appear to look very similar
the only way it'll look any different is if it was ripped from vinyl or burned from really crappy files, right?

that's burst my bubble a wee bit, i was hoping there was a way to tell :( :crash:

so if i wanted to make some bootleg cds all i'd have to do rip the vinyl, burn those files to the cd and claim they have "much higher bitrates than mp3s [or some other such nonsense] hence they have to be legit"
i bet the scumbag bootleggers already know about this
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~Guest 82538
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PostPosted: Sat Dec 29, 2012 9:17 pm 
 

It would be much easier to have one original copy of each rare CD and make a lossless copy of it, then you can reproduce the entire audio tracks seamlessly. No one would be able to tell the difference. And yes, according to the graphs and articles linked before you can tell if the source files were low bit rate MP3 files because of the cut-off threshold. Now if the copy is made from high bit rate MP3 or lossless files it's nearly impossible to discern I guess.

Bootlegging is actually pretty easy to do, and given the right amount of knowledge one can do near perfect bootlegs. And my fear is that it will only get worse as these items become rarer and increase in value. If those Amazon CD-Rs are indicative of anything is that a new facet of the CD market is now emerging, one where people only care about having the actual audio in physical format without having to pay loads of money. If this tendency grows one day you'll stop having labels producing actual CDs and booklets, and relinquishing that responsibility towards large distributors/retailers. I dread the day that becomes an actual possibility.

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japc
Metalhead

Joined: Fri Apr 30, 2004 10:35 pm
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Location: Portugal
PostPosted: Sat Dec 29, 2012 11:16 pm 
 

androdion wrote:
It would be much easier to have one original copy of each rare CD and make a lossless copy of it, then you can reproduce the entire audio tracks seamlessly. No one would be able to tell the difference. And yes, according to the graphs and articles linked before you can tell if the source files were low bit rate MP3 files because of the cut-off threshold. Now if the copy is made from high bit rate MP3 or lossless files it's nearly impossible to discern I guess.

If you use lossless you shouldn't be able to discern as they're bit equal to the wav/cdda. As for mp3 high bit rates tend to get pretty close but that depends on the encoder, you should be able to find something fishy most of the time.

This brings to mind an app I found some time ago when I was very into this stuff, it's called http://www.sonicvisualiser.org and gives plenty of ways to look at sound (I haven't explored a tiny fraction of it). To showcase the application and the wav/flac vs mp3 here's 3 spectrum screenshots (with the default colour scheme) of Carnivore's Race War:

(wav, 320kbps, 173kbps)

Spoiler: show
EAC WAV:
Image

Spoiler: show
Lame 3.99.5 320kbps:
Image

Spoiler: show
Lame 3.99.5 173kbps:
Image


The wav versions goes smoothly loosing intensity until 22 kHz, the others have artificial cutouts lower than that. But hen again they can have the cutouts and be sourced from the CD (dunno, weird filtering on the studio on something like that) or don't have the cutouts because the mp3 encoder is really amazing. Anyway, Sonic Visualizer is pretty cool.
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Last edited by japc on Sat Dec 29, 2012 11:32 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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japc
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PostPosted: Sat Dec 29, 2012 11:29 pm 
 

japc wrote:
If you use lossless you shouldn't be able to discern as they're bit equal to the wav/cdda. As for mp3 high bit rates tend to get pretty close but that depends on the encoder, you should be able to find something fishy most of the time.

Actually that works for tracks but to make an exact CD copy you need a bit more than each of the CD tracks in lossless (you'll need the pre-track gap data, for instance).
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~Guest 82538
Metal freak

Joined: Thu Sep 28, 2006 10:34 am
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PostPosted: Sat Dec 29, 2012 11:47 pm 
 

japc wrote:
japc wrote:
If you use lossless you shouldn't be able to discern as they're bit equal to the wav/cdda. As for mp3 high bit rates tend to get pretty close but that depends on the encoder, you should be able to find something fishy most of the time.

Actually that works for tracks but to make an exact CD copy you need a bit more than each of the CD tracks in lossless (you'll need the pre-track gap data, for instance).

True.

Those graphs above are very interesting indeed. It would be interesting to use that program to see if older albums which are lesser compressed than more recent ones have differences above the 20Khz mark. Basically to see if loudness war actively killed everything above 20Khz on modern productions.

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Flaisch
Metal newbie

Joined: Sat Nov 07, 2009 10:23 pm
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Location: Germany
PostPosted: Sun Dec 30, 2012 1:44 pm 
 

androdion wrote:
Those graphs above are very interesting indeed. It would be interesting to use that program to see if older albums which are lesser compressed than more recent ones have differences above the 20Khz mark. Basically to see if loudness war actively killed everything above 20Khz on modern productions.


I don't think so, if anything, the color intensity would be brighter across the whole frenquency range, up to 22 Khz.

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japc
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PostPosted: Sun Dec 30, 2012 2:13 pm 
 

Flaisch wrote:
I don't think so, if anything, the color intensity would be brighter across the whole frenquency range, up to 22 Khz.

That should never happen, most things happen on the bass, mid and high ranges, little more than cymbals and hit-hats go on the higher frequencies. So the graphic should always be brighter on the bass/mid/high. Check http://obiaudio.com/2010/07/11/eq-chart/
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Flaisch
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PostPosted: Sun Dec 30, 2012 2:23 pm 
 

japc wrote:
Flaisch wrote:
I don't think so, if anything, the color intensity would be brighter across the whole frenquency range, up to 22 Khz.

That should never happen, most things happen on the bass, mid and high ranges, little more than cymbals and hit-hats go on the higher frequencies. So the graphic should always be brighter on the bass/mid/high. Check http://obiaudio.com/2010/07/11/eq-chart/


Yes, but since the loudness of the whole signal is being boosted, the higher frequencies (if present) would also be louder (have a higher amplitude than before), resulting in a brighter color in a spectrogram.
Relative to lower frequencies, of course, they will always be less intense, i.e. that upper frequency region on the specrogram will be less bright.
What i wanted to say, though, is that i think it's unlikely that modern Loudness War productions would remove any content above 20 KHz.


Edited for clarity (hopefully ;))


Last edited by Flaisch on Sun Dec 30, 2012 2:37 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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japc
Metalhead

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PostPosted: Sun Dec 30, 2012 2:34 pm 
 

Flaisch wrote:
Yes, but since the loudness of the whole signal is being boosted, the higher frequencies will also be louder, resulting in a brighter color in a spectrogram.
Relative to lower frequencies, of course, they will always be less intense.
What i wanted to say, though, is that i think it's unlikely that modern Loudness War productions would remove any content above 20 KHz.

Yes, you're right, I don't also think there should be anything relevant (cutouts for instance) on the spectogram.
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dreadmeat
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Location: Auckland, New Zealand
PostPosted: Sun Dec 30, 2012 3:50 pm 
 

speaking of loudness wars etc [brief thread derailment :lol: by the way do we have a thread related to this sort of stuff?]

iron maiden - somewhere in time - 01 - caught somewhere in time
both files ripped to wav from cd using the same method
top = remaster
bottom = original

Image

Image
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japc
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Joined: Fri Apr 30, 2004 10:35 pm
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Location: Portugal
PostPosted: Mon Dec 31, 2012 11:08 am 
 

dreadmeat wrote:
speaking of loudness wars etc [brief thread derailment :lol: by the way do we have a thread related to this sort of stuff?]

iron maiden - somewhere in time - 01 - caught somewhere in time
both files ripped to wav from cd using the same method
top = remaster
bottom = original

Yes, that happens a lot. Remember the Abigal remaster I talked to you about (http://www.justiceforaudio.org/forum/vi ... f=17&t=554)? That has clipping all over the place.

But the worse I've seen is Behexen - From the Devil's Chalice, not a remaster but a case study so bear with me. I bought it yesterday from SoM sale for 3€, and upon reading some reviews what most people mentioned, besides the great music, was the lowsy mastering. I think someone made a rookie mistake somewhere as that isn't normal (just listen to it).

Track 01 - Invocation Of Zabulus, just look at how the righ channel (low graph) is completely flat at most of the time:

Image

now with view clipping (red is bad):

Image

Edit: added the waveforms.
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dreadmeat
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PostPosted: Mon Dec 31, 2012 5:58 pm 
 

whoah, yeah that's really bad.
death magnetic looks similar [but not quite as much clipping] i bet defiled's in crisis album would also look interesting...
it's not so bad if the music is 'fuzzy' already, lots of distortion, death/black metal screams etc
but anything clean sounds appalling, or at least more noticeable :nono:

it pisses me off when i change cds and have to reach for the volume control lest i blow a hole in the wall
when i listened to mp3s a lot more i ran mp3gain on them but the only way i can avoid it with cds is to play them in the pc and use normalisation [which i don't want to have to do]
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slayerhatesusall
Metalhead

Joined: Fri Oct 24, 2008 7:45 pm
Posts: 1816
Location: United States
PostPosted: Tue Jan 01, 2013 9:02 pm 
 

dreadmeat wrote:
so if i'm reading this correctly there appears to be no way to tell if a cd has been burned from mp3 files or wav files or flac or indeed even mastered [made from the original master, i'm unsure of the actual terminology]
because they all appear to look very similar
the only way it'll look any different is if it was ripped from vinyl or burned from really crappy files, right?

that's burst my bubble a wee bit, i was hoping there was a way to tell :( :crash:

so if i wanted to make some bootleg cds all i'd have to do rip the vinyl, burn those files to the cd and claim they have "much higher bitrates than mp3s [or some other such nonsense] hence they have to be legit"
i bet the scumbag bootleggers already know about this


I use foobar2000 with the Dynamic range meter component, when you view the log files it tells you what the bit rate is. Here is one I did of Boris- Akuma no uta, intentionally ripped to my computer with lower then cd quality.

foobar2000 1.1.15 / Dynamic Range Meter 1.1.1
log date: 2013-01-01 19:55:00

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Analyzed: Boris / Akuma No Uta
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

DR Peak RMS Duration Track
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
DR5 -1.79 dB -8.63 dB 9:41 01-Introduction
DR2 0.00 dB -5.12 dB 3:22 02-Ibitsu
DR2 0.00 dB -2.94 dB 3:20 03-Furi
DR4 0.00 dB -6.88 dB 12:14 04-Naki Kyoku
DR3 0.00 dB -4.39 dB 6:29 05-Ano Onna No Onryou
DR2 0.00 dB -4.27 dB 4:01 06-Akuma No Uta
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Number of tracks: 6
Official DR value: DR3

Samplerate: 44100 Hz
Channels: 2
Bitrate: 329 kbps
Codec: AAC
================================================================================

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~Guest 82538
Metal freak

Joined: Thu Sep 28, 2006 10:34 am
Posts: 6400
PostPosted: Wed Jan 02, 2013 1:21 am 
 

Just out of curiosity, in what bit rate did you rip the CD? Around 70-80Kbps?

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slayerhatesusall
Metalhead

Joined: Fri Oct 24, 2008 7:45 pm
Posts: 1816
Location: United States
PostPosted: Wed Jan 02, 2013 2:28 am 
 

androdion wrote:
Just out of curiosity, in what bit rate did you rip the CD? Around 70-80Kbps?

320kbps with the AAC format.

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japc
Metalhead

Joined: Fri Apr 30, 2004 10:35 pm
Posts: 512
Location: Portugal
PostPosted: Wed Jan 02, 2013 8:22 am 
 

Anyone has the Omen - Battle Cry reissue from Metal Blade with the black backcover with the large Omen Battle Cry?

Just got a copy from an amazon 3rd party (http://www.amazon.co.uk/gp/product/B000 ... 02_s00_i00) very cheap, and some things strike me as odd: it was sealed but one of the spines is torn, it has no inner print on the backcover but comes in a transparent jewelcase, the backcover layout is very much like the limited edition (black with the large band + title) but without the limited edition on the bottom right, the cover is very blurry and the paper feels weird.

Matrix is 14215-2 03 with a DiscUSA logo
SID codes: IFPI L794 IFPI 2D40.

Anyone with a similar edition? I guess I should discard this as a counterfeit and bug the seller, if not for anything else because of packaging + torn spine.
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~Guest 82538
Metal freak

Joined: Thu Sep 28, 2006 10:34 am
Posts: 6400
PostPosted: Wed Jan 02, 2013 9:10 am 
 

slayerhatesusall wrote:
androdion wrote:
Just out of curiosity, in what bit rate did you rip the CD? Around 70-80Kbps?

320kbps with the AAC format.

Now I'm confused. You said you ripped the album with "lower than cd quality"... What was it that you were trying to say with your previous post then?

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DigitalDictator
Mallcore Kid

Joined: Fri Sep 28, 2012 1:41 pm
Posts: 27
Location: Italy
PostPosted: Thu Jan 03, 2013 6:13 am 
 

japc wrote:
Anyone has the Omen - Battle Cry reissue from Metal Blade with the black backcover with the large Omen Battle Cry?


Matrix is 14215-2 03 with a DiscUSA logo
SID codes: IFPI L794 IFPI 2D40.

Anyone with a similar edition? I guess I should discard this as a counterfeit and bug the seller, if not for anything else because of packaging + torn spine.


If you post a photo I can compare it with other DiscUSA matrix that I have.
I don't think that logo could be easily faked...

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japc
Metalhead

Joined: Fri Apr 30, 2004 10:35 pm
Posts: 512
Location: Portugal
PostPosted: Thu Jan 03, 2013 11:51 am 
 

DigitalDictator wrote:
If you post a photo I can compare it with other DiscUSA matrix that I have.
I don't think that logo could be easily faked...


Yes, I guess you're right. In the meantime I contacted Metal Blade and they kindly replied that that matrix data matches for the release and DiscUSA was/is their manufacturer.

Anyway, the photos:

Spoiler: show
Image
Image
Image
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