HydrogenAudio

Music Discussion => General Music Discussion => Topic started by: Sunzu on 2019-10-27 17:01:54

Title: Greatest hits differences with original albums
Post by: Sunzu on 2019-10-27 17:01:54
Here is what I discovered today which surely everyone other than me is aware of. Using Express Rip MP3 32-320kbs vbr v0. Depeche Mode -The Best of Vol. 1, Violator and Ultra are the CDs. Song, It's No Good; CD, Vol 1, 9.26mb 5:58 216kbs. Ultra, 9.36mb 5:58 219kps. Not a big difference but wait. Personal Jesus; Vol 1, 5.93mb 3:47 219kps.  Violator, 7.27mb 4:56 206kps. Big difference. Enjoy the Silence; Vol 1, 6.58mb 4:14 216kps. Violator,  8.68mb 6:12 195kps. Just another lesson for me in my evolving new hobby.
Title: Re: Greatest hits differences with original albums
Post by: zordaz on 2019-10-30 08:37:34
You are probably comparing apples and oranges; the songs can have different masterings, have been normalized or adjusted in gain. All those aspects have impact on the bitrate when encoding.
Title: Re: Greatest hits differences with original albums
Post by: Signal Lost on 2019-10-30 11:46:39
Personal Jesus; Vol 1, 5.93mb 3:47 219kps.  Violator, 7.27mb 4:56 206kps. Big difference. Enjoy the Silence; Vol 1, 6.58mb 4:14 216kps. Violator,  8.68mb 6:12 195kps. Just another lesson for me in my evolving new hobby.
You are comparing apples and oranges. Just to add to @zordaz reply - these 2 tracks (Jesus and Silence) have significantly different mixes, duration, mastering, gain etc between single and album versions and between various issues of the album.
Title: Re: Greatest hits differences with original albums
Post by: Sunzu on 2019-11-05 02:54:54
Thanks, now I  noticed a new thing. I ripped music from a live DVD and I have a remaster CD with the exact same performance of a song from that concert. I used the same encoder for both, MP3 vbr V0. The CD version came out 226kbs and the DVD version came out 302. I wonder if that has to do with bit depth.
Title: Re: Greatest hits differences with original albums
Post by: Sunzu on 2019-11-05 04:27:17
The CD is Screaming for Vengeance remaster and the bonus song is Devil's Child that is from Live Vengeance '82. When I heard the song on the CD I recognized it right away from the DVD  and realized then that there must be a way to extract audio from a DVD. I finally found a good program to do that and discovered CDs made this way sounded fuller on average than regular CDs (completely subjective). Somewhere I remember reading that DVDs have 24bit depth and CDs are 16 and this was the reason.
Title: Re: Greatest hits differences with original albums
Post by: zordaz on 2019-11-05 08:04:52
Thanks, now I  noticed a new thing. I ripped music from a live DVD and I have a remaster CD with the exact same performance of a song from that concert. I used the same encoder for both, MP3 vbr V0. The CD version came out 226kbs and the DVD version came out 302. I wonder if that has to do with bit depth.

Yes, this has to do with bit depth.
Title: Re: Greatest hits differences with original albums
Post by: zordaz on 2019-11-05 08:08:58
The CD is Screaming for Vengeance remaster and the bonus song is Devil's Child that is from Live Vengeance '82. When I heard the song on the CD I recognized it right away from the DVD  and realized then that there must be a way to extract audio from a DVD. I finally found a good program to do that and discovered CDs made this way sounded fuller on average than regular CDs (completely subjective). Somewhere I remember reading that DVDs have 24bit depth and CDs are 16 and this was the reason.

A higher bit depth will (in itself) never result in 'fuller sound'.  Please be cautious when suggesting or suspecting things like this on this forum.
Title: Re: Greatest hits differences with original albums
Post by: Sunzu on 2019-11-11 03:40:16
Thanks, now I  noticed a new thing. I ripped music from a live DVD and I have a remaster CD with the exact same performance of a song from that concert. I used the same encoder for both, MP3 vbr V0. The CD version came out 226kbs and the DVD version came out 302. I wonder if that has to do with bit depth.

Yes, this has to do with bit depth.
Ok, Thanks
Title: Re: Greatest hits differences with original albums
Post by: [JAZ] on 2019-11-11 19:18:46
Yes, this has to do with bit depth.

Since we are talking about MP3, LAME, and VBR, could you explain why do you think that bit depth has any relation with the higher bitrate?

What I would think is that the DVD is ripped at 48Khz and the CD is ripped at 44Khz.
LAME has always been tuned for 44Khz, not for 48Khz. Also, in this case, given the increase of sampling rate and being a live performance which is not necessarily post-processed in studio, I would expect that the bandwidth in there is full of noise, which LAME has to try to store in some way.

Title: Re: Greatest hits differences with original albums
Post by: zordaz on 2019-11-12 12:47:06
Yes, this has to do with bit depth.
Since we are talking about MP3, LAME, and VBR, could you explain why do you think that bit depth has any relation with the higher bitrate?

You are right; I mixed up sampling rate with bit depth in my previous post.
Title: Re: Greatest hits differences with original albums
Post by: greynol on 2019-11-12 15:07:37
Somewhere I remember reading that DVDs have 24bit depth and CDs are 16 and this was the reason.
Don’t believe everything you read.

In terms of subjective opinions, they aren’t exactly welcome on this forum.  Yours would be such a case.
https://hydrogenaud.io/index.php?topic=3974
See rule #8.

Testing this hypothesis is straight forward: you take a 24-bit file, convert it to 16-bit with triangular shaped dither, pad back to 24 bits and then compare them using a proper double-blind protocol. 
Title: Re: Greatest hits differences with original albums
Post by: For Serious on 2020-01-16 17:46:26
I have found that more than half of the Greatest Hits CDs I own, are the same recording as the original album but have been turned up to a level of having clipping added to the tracks.
You can check for clipping in a wav editor for yourself, if you think there are substantial reasons to worry about size and bit rate differences in songs.