I do a lot of listening using headphones, which means that I can sometimes hear problems which may go unnoticed if heard via loudspeakers.
A few days ago I downloaded the track Summer from this CD of Frank Bridge's music - http://www.discogs.com/Frank-Bridge-...elease/3822914 from iTUnes.
Ignoring the issues about listening via a digital compressed format, this particular recording has a fairly continuous low frequency background noise. Other recordings also have evidence of low frequency noise - so this problem is not an isolated one.
Questions which come to mind are
"Was this low frequency noise present in the original recording?"
"Did nobody hear it, when the recording was made?"
"Has the LF noise been introduced later, due to some other process?"
It is possible to reduce LF noise considerably using modern digital filtering techniques, and this can be very effective if done carefully. The particular recording sounds rather good, apart from the LF noise, so it's a shame that this hasn't been removed, or that more care wasn't taken to avoid it in the first place.
However, I'm not convinced that recording engineers of the past were unaware of these problems - so the problems could have been introduced later, though how? If the CD remaster were made from an LP though, then it would be easy enough to see how LF noise could get in - though the best LP replay systems can largely avoid this.
Comments!
A few days ago I downloaded the track Summer from this CD of Frank Bridge's music - http://www.discogs.com/Frank-Bridge-...elease/3822914 from iTUnes.
Ignoring the issues about listening via a digital compressed format, this particular recording has a fairly continuous low frequency background noise. Other recordings also have evidence of low frequency noise - so this problem is not an isolated one.
Questions which come to mind are
"Was this low frequency noise present in the original recording?"
"Did nobody hear it, when the recording was made?"
"Has the LF noise been introduced later, due to some other process?"
It is possible to reduce LF noise considerably using modern digital filtering techniques, and this can be very effective if done carefully. The particular recording sounds rather good, apart from the LF noise, so it's a shame that this hasn't been removed, or that more care wasn't taken to avoid it in the first place.
However, I'm not convinced that recording engineers of the past were unaware of these problems - so the problems could have been introduced later, though how? If the CD remaster were made from an LP though, then it would be easy enough to see how LF noise could get in - though the best LP replay systems can largely avoid this.
Comments!
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