Originally posted by jayne lee wilson
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Audiophilia
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Audiophilia
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One definitely seems to lose ones upper partials with advancing years. I can only substantiate this to myself by rubbing the tips of my fingers together next to my auditory channels, and what was once a sharp hiss has now become a dull hush, though the problem did start on the right ear before the left one, which has now caught up.
As far as listening habits go, unlike my late father, who, when this happened in his later years, overcompensated by switching from fm to medium of long wavelength channels and turning bass levels almost up to dubstyle levels, my way of dealing with it is to turn the treble levels up almost to maximum (not for all recordings, some being quite shrill enough as they are), and cut down on the bass. On having my right ear syringed a few months ago I found I was able to rebalance to some extent, but I've never really liked bass-heavy music in any case, reacting to it with sensations of impending physical nausea.
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Richard Barrett
Having read the first page of Bryn's link I'm looking forward to devoting time to reading the rest, since this is an issue I think about quite a lot.
For those with an interest in such things and a copy of my Negatives CD (there must be at least one such person here!) I hereby reveal that one of the pieces on that disc was recorded in analogue (using Dolby SR) while the others were recorded digitally. I don't think anyone could tell which one it was.
I would always record in 24-bit since this gives more flexibility in post-production. I think it will make a difference in material with a wide dynamic range, for obvious reasons. I don't think that sampling rates above 48kHz make any perceptible difference to anything. That's my current thinking on the subject. Also it's often been my experience that you can hear things in the recording studio that you'll never hear again once the recording is released or broadcast.
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