Wednesday, October 21, 2009

The Loudness War Analyzed «

The loudness war (or loudness race) is the music industry's tendency to record, produce, and broadcast music at progressively increasing levels of loudness to attempt to create a sound that stands out from others.

The trend of increasing loudness as shown by waveform images of "Something" by The Beatles mastered on CD four times since 1983.
This phenomenon can be observed in many areas of the music industry, particularly broadcasting and albums released on CD and DVD. In the case of CDs, the war stems from artists' and producers' desires to create CDs that sound as loud as possible, or louder than CDs from competing artists or recording labels.[1]
However, as the maximum amplitude of a CD is at a fixed level, once that level has been reached, the overall loudness can only be increased by a combination of dynamic range compression and make-up gain. This is done by applying an increasingly high ratio of compression to the dynamic range of the recording and then increasing the gain of the recording until the peaks have reached maximum. Certain extreme uses of dynamic range compression can introduce distortion or clipping to the waveform of the recording.

Interview with Hiroyasu Kondo: Audio Notes


Hiroyasu Kondo—founder of Audio Note Japan, and a legendary figure in his own time—took place during HI-FI '96 last June at the Waldorf=Astoria. It seemed very natural; the crowd at the Show was very internationalist. Herb Reichert of Audio Note New York found us a quiet corner after lunch, and we sat down to talk.

Read all about it here

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A Film by Ken Barnes

You can watch the video here

An interesting choice of features


While the NHB-18NS lacks some of the features found on microchip-driven preamps festooned with fluorescent screens, its functionality could hardly be called minimalist. That's good—a $23,250 preamplifier should pretty much be able to do everything but put the record on your turntable and lower the stylus into the groove. (By the way, NHB stands for "not heard before," NS for "no switches.")