back to article Lossless music goes High Street

British digital download store 7Digital is expanding the range of lossless music available for download. Albums will now be available in the industry standard FLAC format from artists such as Radiohead and Enya - in some cases cheaper than the MP3 equivalent. Both 24-bit and 16-bit versions will be available; FLAC is a …

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  1. hitmouse

    Windows Media Player

    does support FLAC through free Directshow plugins (and has done so for years).

    Making support available in Windows so that's not seen as bloat by the 99.999% of users who have not even heard of FLAC would also rest on the format being *completely unencumbered* by patent and license restrictions. Let's not forget how even MP3 and Adobe's free-for-everybody-except-Microsoft PDF played out.

    Portable devices that support lossless, or indeed >300kps playback of any type - including VBR MP3, would greatly aid introduction to market.

    The French Qobuz.com store has been offering choice of lossless and lossy formats for some time, and there are no geo-restrictions for download. You can also redownload anything you've bought from them should you lose your copy.

  2. Chris Collins

    Lama

    Winamp seems fine with FLAC. Worked as my music player for may years now. Put all the gstreamer libraries on your Gnome box an Rhythmbox plays them too.

  3. Graham Lerant
    Meh

    I have often wondered about the mental state

    of folk who pay more for a lossy download than the CD itself costs from HMV or Amazon.

    Oh I forgot! It's the stupid kidz!

    1. Anonymous Coward
      Unhappy

      Kids don't care about music these days

      Kids don't see the value in recorded music, to them music is just another distraction in another boring day. They just want backgroudn noise, they won't sit and listen to music, my kids are the same music is just a background to life. Me I always buy CDs to get the artwork, the high-quality, the whole package.

  4. Anonymous Coward
    Anonymous Coward

    Bleep do WAV as well

    in both 16- and 24-bit flavours

  5. Wize

    It may be lossless but...

    ...can you really tell the difference?

    Besides, most people just want to listen to music while doing something else. Its not that they are totally immersed in it. Thats going to muddy some of the difference to start with. Then its your equipment...

    http://xkcd.com/841/

    1. pip25
      Happy

      Yes, you can tell

      I'm no audiophile, and I do listen to music while doing something else, but the difference between a 320kbps MP3 and a FLAC is very much noticeable for more complex songs - although you might have to listen to both to realize what you were missing.

      I sorely missed the lossless option from music stores, so any news like this is very much welcome. :)

    2. Killraven

      I'm no audiophile either but...

      Yes, I can tell the difference. I rip all my CDs into MP3 format so I can jukebox them via WinAmp and play them on my home stereo. 320kbps or higher definitely sounds best but I am quite happy with as low as 192kbps. 160kbps starts to noticeably sound poor and the 128kbps that seems to be the standard for downloads and portable devices is pretty poor quality indeed. If I had a higher quality stereo I'd be able to tell the difference more.

      But as you say, most people just want something playing as background music and that's fine. But don't expect me to pay lossless quality prices for cellphone quality MP3s.

    3. Ru

      YMMV

      If you're playing the music through cheap speakers, cheap earbuds or (worst of all) your mobile phone speakers, lossless music is a waste of money, a waste of space and at least in the latter case, a waste of power as FLAC decoding is unlikely to be hardware accellerated.

      With moderately good speakers or a nice set of headphones through a reasonable amp, you probably can tell the difference between lossless and good quality lossy. You might not care, of course, and the difference can be quite subtle.

      Shouldn't cost you the earth, either.

  6. TheProf
    Facepalm

    Prices starting at £9.99

    Or buy the CD for a lot less and rip it yourself.

    (All 'regular' Radiohead albums cost under a tenner at Amazon. )

    1. IanPotter

      RE: Prices starting at £9.99

      Shame the actual price is £8.99 then and for 24 bit flac too which is higher than cd quality. Not bad deal really. Would need to know the sample rate too though, cpu on my Squeezebox Classic runs out of puff at 48KHz though I think Squeeze Centre is sane enough to down sample if necessary.

      They've only got about seven or eight titles available though, including both 16 and 24-bit, not going to stop me buying cds and ripping yet then. Not through choice though, most of my cd collection has been opened once, ripped and then has to be bloody stored. Can only think of a few times when I've looked at the sleeve notes for any reason. Now if you want to sell me the vinyl edition and give me a flac copy too then we can talk...

  7. PugRallye

    Still a long way to go...

    Pay MORE for a download of something I can get a hard copy of - that I own, can lend/sell etc?

    Where's the incentive?

    As for formats, I use FLAC for everything - and it's "standard" as in - pretty much the most popular lossless format, maybe "default" would be a better word than "standard".

    Personally, I just wish Apple would buy the WavPack codec - yes, yes, bare with me. The only way any new format will get a chance is if has the backing of the biggest online music retailer (iTunes) and their supported devices.

    It matters not what other players adopt any other formats IMO - it's nice to see FLAC getting a toe-hold, but until it's supported by iDevices, it'll never be anything other than "niche" (even if it's a sizable one).

    WavPack offers a great solution - one rip, that creates two files per track - one lossy file (that's small like MP3) and gets used on your portable device (to save space where outright quality isn't an issue) and a "delta" that lives on your home HDD and enables lossless playback from there.

    It's genius IMO - but barely supported.

    Yet. (well I can dream)

    1. Oliver 7
      Headmaster

      Pervert!

      ...I'm not baring anything with you.

  8. jabuzz
    FAIL

    Been available for years

    Ok so it is only classical recordings, but Deutsche Grammophon has pretty much it's entire catalog available for download as FLAC, as well as MP3 with not a drop of DRM in sight, and it's been that way for a couple of years at least.

  9. Wanda Lust
    Pint

    forked-daap

    I'm sure 7-Digital offered FLAC in the past & then it disappeared. Great to see them picking it up again.

    I decided to go FLAC for "gold" copies as it's the proverbial "open" standard. In my gaff forked-daap serves a large FLAC library out to iTunes clients over a network & I transcode a copy to AAC for portable devices. Sure, isn't storage cheap these days.

    My aged ears might not discern the difference between lossy & lossless but it's the principle that matters.

  10. Anonymous Coward
    Anonymous Coward

    DBT?

    Try ABXing FLAC/ALAC lossless with mp3 V0. On even a good mid-fi rig with great loudspeakers it's very very hard to tell the difference (practically impossible with statistical confidence).

    High bitrate mp3 does have problems with certain rare samples, the knowledge of which ruins the entire experience for some people who listen with their eyes of course.

    1. One Igloo

      Not hard at all

      Try the same experiment with even half-decent headphones rather than speakers (any speakers). Or with classical or acoustic jazz music as the source. Or both together. What I hear is a halo of compression artefacts surrounding thin congested music. A bit like an audio equivalent of the visual artefacts you get if you overdo the processing of JPG images.

      I've done this with several popular computer-based rip-compression programs (iTunes, WMP, VLC, etc) and with dedicated hardware (Brennan JB7). And at a range of bitrates. Uniformly horrible to my ears.

      If you listen mainly to rock or pop over speakers you might get away with it. Those recordings usually start out compressed (in dynamic terms) anyway, though typically done with much more sophisticated kit/algorithms which produce fewer artefacts (or produce "desirable" side-effects such as punch).

      1. Anonymous Coward
        Holmes

        Artifacting @ 128K?

        Which is exactly what you've described - in a sighted test with expectation bias and prejudice set to maximum and bitrate set to low (because it's you know, sighted and you know what you are listening to...).

        And classical and jazz are actually relatively unchallenging for mp3 to reproduce; electronic and heavy rock are most prone to pre-echo artifacting.

        I've personally done close to a hundred DBTs with *max bitrate* mp3s with good to great source phone or speaker rigs and all the artifacts that one associates with inferior codecs like mp3 are mighty difficult to hear in a DBT.

        If you can hear halo/thin effects easily in a DBT I suggest you present your golden ears to Hydrogen Audio for some peer review...

  11. Anonymous Coward
    Stop

    lossless is less?

    In a lossless format, there's still only a limited amount of information. If you accept to use lossy compression, you can start from more precise data, and the information lost in the compression should be precisely the one you are the least likely to notice, whereas with lossless compression, you indiscriminately remove information before compressing if you want to achieve the same final size.

    1. Anonymous Coward
      Facepalm

      Lossless is lossless

      Rip from red book CD-DA to WAV, transcode to FLAC then transcode to ALAC lossless then transcode to FLAC then transcode to WAV, to FLAC, to ALAC, burn to CD-DA then finally rip from this burned CD to WAV and bit compare or invert mix paste with the first generation WAV. Assuming undamaged cd discs, the output will be identical, as in zero difference.

      There is zero generation loss.

    2. edge_e
      Flame

      not entirely sure what you're trying to say but your closing comment is wrong

      A CD has already lost information from what was originally played because of sampling and quantization levels but if you take that as the starting point

      FLAC will compress the data on that CD to a smaller size in such a way that the original 0's and 1's contained on that cd are reproduced exactly. You can repeat the decode, re-encode cycle a thousand times and still end up with exactly what you started with. A lossy format like mp3 tries to decide what data is irrelevant in the original and throws it away. It does a reasonably good job of this and what you get when you decode will sound to your ears the same as the original(well that's the intent). If you looked at the 1's and 0's after decoding, you will see differences, even at higher bit rates. If you put an mp3 through a thousand decode/recode cycles you might not even be able to recognise what is left.

      To sum up, lossless formats are exactly what they say, without loss! there is no removal of information what so ever.

    3. Annihilator
      Facepalm

      F***in' ell..

      "with lossless compression, you indiscriminately remove information before compressing if you want to achieve the same final size."

      Dear Lord, do you actually engage the brain before spouting such nonsense, or just let it flow naturally?? Lossless = lossless. You start with the digital file, you compress it as best you can, but only in a way where you can recreate the original sound. Zip is a good example of lossless. Try zipping a text file, and unzipping it. Do you get a synopsis of the document?

      1. hexx

        well

        "Dear Lord, do you actually engage the brain before spouting such nonsense, or just let it flow naturally??" - apparently not. i've seen more posts like this on other forums. also ppl claiming you can't hear the difference.

  12. AndrueC Silver badge
    Happy

    Yay!

    About bloody time. Squeeze Server can certainly handle FLAC so I'm golden. This might finally mean I can stop buying CDs.

  13. AndrueC Silver badge
    Meh

    Although..

    ..if they supplied as WMA lossless than it would be compatible with most music players. Apart from the iPod of course which will have to have iTunes convert it first :-/

    1. hitmouse

      lossless is lossless when all you care about is storage

      And if you look at car CD players, then MP3 and WMA are pretty much all 95% or more of them support. Even the ones that promote iPod compatibility require that the iPod playback the audio as there's no direct m4a support. After you've taken into account those 3 formats, then every other audio format combined has almost negligible footprint.

      The same goes double for most desktop portable devices which have been retrofitted for USB sticks and SD cards. They handle 2GB at most (which doesn't give you much lossless support), MP3 and WMA, and 300kps or less. You need to wait 5-10 years for all those devices to be replaced before you can start talking about other formats muscling their way to 1% of the market.

  14. SirDigalot
    Paris Hilton

    why bother anyway

    when most ofthe crap we buy is mastered by a monkey with bananas in his ears, compressed and limited to within an inch of it's poor life....

    so who really cares if it is simply just a wall of noise these days, in fact i have met a few musicians who try to play live like that.

    there is also WMA 9 lossless too, not half bad if you use windows...

    paris...because she likes it loud!

    1. Anonymous Coward
      Anonymous Coward

      Conversion

      Because as long as you have the lossless file you can convert it to whatever format you need.

      I use Ogg Vorbis, while my wife's music is all in MP3.

  15. verdemar
    Thumb Up

    Great

    Obviously, the incentive is in instant access _and_ lossless quality.

    French site Qobuz has been doing this for a while though.

  16. Anonymous Coward
    Happy

    also...

    boomkat.com

    I buy most of my music from there now, it's like 7digital but with fewer artists complaining about getting ripped off. They also sell vinyl and CDs (in addition to FLAC & 320-MP3) and I bet they'd do you a C90 if you asked nicely.

  17. twunt

    Waste of space

    What a waste of time and space - for people who *think* they can hear the difference between CD, FLAC and an MP3 ripped at 192 or above - you are wrong.

    Your ears are incapable of discerning the differences.

    Don't believe me? That's because you've never tried a proper blind test.

    Arrange to have the same piece of music played from 3 sources played to you at random, repeatedly and note which source you think is which.

    You will get the source correct no more than you would be simply guessing randomly.

    By the way - a test where YOU know the ource before hand will not work. You will always think you can hear a difference. To be a really bastard - try this out on some music snob, but repeatedly play him the mp3 version. He still claim to have identified the FLAC one even if it doesn't exist.

    1. IanPotter

      RE: Waste of space

      Aye, but it is my time and space to waste so why should it bother you? This sort of inverted snobbery is nearly as common as the audiophile version and frankly just as tedious. I use flac as my archival format as it can be easily transcoded with no loss of fidelity, except that inherent to the target format anyway. Vbr mp3 is fine for my car/train listening but I use the flacs in the house as they are there, in most cases I have the cd anyway but would have to dig it out.

    2. Anonymous Coward
      Anonymous Coward

      maybe your ears, matey

      but not mine. i have done blind tests, with mp3 and flac, and the vast majority of the time i get it correct. Not always, some music lends itself to compression more than others. But as someone else mentioned cymbals are where its at, listen to cymbols on 192 mp3s and you can easily tell, another pointer is incredibly deep bass. Youre right regarding CD and Flac tho, there is virtually no difference, but thats the whole point of flac

    3. Rattus Rattus

      @twunt: Not the point

      The point of lossless isn't for better listening quality, it's so you can keep the best quality source possible. That way, when you convert it into one format for one device, a different format for another device, and want to use part of a track for backing music for your latest Youtube video, they each get created from your high quality source and you don't get the gradually declining quality from shifting between lossy formats.

      It's purpose is archival rather than listening.

  18. Graham Bartlett

    Dance music in FLAC

    Why bother? You're never going to notice the difference on dance music. I mean, you start with something electronic, process the shit out of it (or *into* it...), and that's your product. MP3 encoding is not going to massively affect things.

    The *real* tell on lossless vs MP3 is cymbals. Tons of rapidly-varying high frequencies will play hell with any lossy compression system. So rock and metal can actually be a good place to spot this. Pendulum's mash-up of metal and rave is particularly nasty through MP3.

    1. IanPotter
      Thumb Up

      RE: Dance music in FLAC

      Tend to use Massive Attack's Angel as a stress tester myself but for similar reasons. Bad source copy or equipment quite easily turns the cymbals to mush.

  19. Anonymous Coward
    Thumb Up

    Lossless all the way

    All online music shops should offer lossless music. This isn't just because it sounds better than mp3, but because, as pointed out above, it can be transcoded to something else that takes up less space if you wish and you still have the original lossless file.

    All my music for the squeezebox is FLAC (ripped from CD or purchased online from Linn), all my music for my phone which I use as an mp3 player is mp3 and generated from the FLAC files. I'd never buy an mp3 file as I wouldn't then want to convert that to some other lossy file type should I so need to in the future. FLAC and other open lossless formats seem much more future proof.

  20. hexx

    we need a big player

    every time there's an apple itunes event i always wait for that big announcement - lossless purchases.

    we need a huge catalogue, it's fine that linn and deutsche gramaphone are (and have been for a while) selling lossless albums but these are not everybody's cup of tea.

    i'm quite fed up by storing cds. every single one of them i buy i just rip in lossless and put back on the shelf and i never touch them again.

    also all music which have been recorded in 24-bit should be sold as that, not converted 16-bit version. those who have had a chance to compare both 24-bit and then 16-bit converted tracks would agree, there's huge loss during this conversion.

  21. Kevin

    @ AC- "lossless is less?"

    AC, I know what you are talking about and agree with you, although you could have perhaps explained it better. Let me try. Imagine you have two audio files of your favourite track

    1. a wave PCM at 16bit, 11kHz giving a bit-rate of 176 kbits/sec.

    2. an MP3 also at ~176 kbits/sec.

    The PCM wave is "lossless" and the MP3 is lossy, yet I'm guessing most people will understand that the MP3 will sound much, much better.

    What AC is saying is that given 700 kbits/sec (roughly what FLAC CD rip might use), lossy compression will sound better because it would mean that it would have been able to start from say 24bit @ 192kHz to achieve the same end bitrate.

    So the statement is correct, with a slight caveat:

    *At a given bitrate* lossless compression will sound worse than lossy compression

  22. Paul Ireland

    Unfortunately compression and artefacts are everywhere nowadays

    "I have often wondered about the mental state of folk who pay more for a lossy download than the CD itself costs from HMV or Amazon.

    Oh I forgot! It's the stupid kidz!"

    Heh heh. Not to mention everyone else who have been mislead by the consumer electronics industry into thinking:

    1. Compressed mpeg video on DVDs is better quality than lossless VHS

    2. Compressed HD camcorders are better quality than lossless miniDV

    3. Compressed digital tv is better quality than old analogue

    4. LCD TVs are better quality than CRT displays (early ghosting of fast moving images, bad pixels, etc)

    5. HD TVs are better quality than normal TVs when showing normal TV signals, which they aren't due to resolution upscaling artefacts

    etc and so on...

    (note I'm talking quality not resolution here, quality not quantity)

  23. Anonymous Coward
    Megaphone

    Cut off...

    The way in which MP3 and all lossy compressions gain their compression is through removal of supposed inaudible frequencies.

    I dumped MP3 long ago (perhaps MP3 encoders have got better now) but years ago I could tell the difference no matter what bit rate was used. MP3's sounded like absolute crap with all the high pitched sounds cut off like loud stuff gets cut off on CDs that are not mastered properly (loudness).

    Ogg Vorbis performed much better at low bit rates which was MP3s intended use. AAC is not too bad either. Encoding MP3s at 360kbps is totally pointless might as well just have it lossless. A few of the bits of music I have FLAC almost gets as good a bit rate without losing anything and it's not as if hard drives are small these days.

    Main points of FLAC, APE whatever is you can re-encode to whatever lossy format you like and are not stuck with crap quality music.

  24. Jerome 0
    Stop

    Upsampling

    I think you may have misunderstood the point that Mark Waldrep was making in the linked article. It is not "because of filters applied during the 'upmastering' process" that the quality is lacking. The presence of this filtering is merely an indication that upsampling has taken place, and upsampling is (in this context) a pointless procedure.

    When you upsample a recording, it means that the resultant recording, in whatever high-definition format it is stored, has been made from a low definition original, and will sound (at best) identical to that original. It's the equivalent of taking an album of low-bitrate MP3s and burning them to a CD, then calling it "CD quality".

    This is essentially the problem - companies seem to be taking the same old low-standard recordings and passing them off as something much better. This is shoddy, if not downright fraudulent behaviour.

  25. Darren Bell
    Thumb Up

    Ubuntu One Music Store ....

    is backed by 7Digital. I'll have to keep an eye on this one me thinks :)

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