The major record labels are still using DRM copyright watermarking (similar to PPM on radio) even if the vast majority of content delivery is now by streaming rather than downloading. The effect is audible as a warbling, chattering sound in the midrange, especially on Classical, Jazz, and other forms of mostly acoustic music.
Hmm! I think I've heard this on some Amazon Music recordings. I call it "The Amazon Sound."
I find that it's hit or miss, though, in that I'll come across a track that has it (Garden Party by Rick Nelson, for example), and given that the track has multiple entries because it appears on several Rick Nelson compilations, I simply play through a few seconds of each one, and I almost always find one that isn't affected and sounds normal. I suspect someone who did the transfers into Amazon's systems didn't properly vet their sources for such problems.
In fact, this is what helped drive me away from downloads, as lots of tracks on iTunes are afflicted by it, and thus sound much worse than ripping them from CD.
I generally find modern Youtube videos to have decent audio quality (unlike the days of yore when everything on the Internet was encoded using the same, lousy 128k MP3 codec). Amazon Music not affected by "The Sound" is quite good too, aside from obviously sloppy transfers that sound as though they came from worn out vinyl records and cassettes, of course.
That said, I have actual, physical copies of some of those same tracks, and I find that when I transfer them, they sound far superior to AM's versions, probably because I have decent equipment (Pioneer PL-510A turntable with a nice Audio-Technica cartridge whose model number I forget) and I try to keep my records clean (I use Nitty Gritty record cleaning fluid to deep clean the grooves), and it really doesn't take much effort once it's set up, so why is Amazon Music being so lazy? I've found the same tracks on Youtube, and even
those sound better!
I can't speak to the other streaming services, as I don't subscribe to them (I only do Amazon Music incidentally because it came with our Prime subscription; I didn't explicitly seek it out, and relied exclusively on Youtube before I discovered it about 4 years ago.)
RE: ripping vs iTunes Store purchase...that's what I do too, unless the need is instant. Used CDs are very cheap, and I get to pick the rip codec and bitrate. There is now an increasing amount of new music not released on CD. Fortunately (for me) most new music is horrible, so no big deal. But I've also had no DRM issues with purchased files from iTunes or Amazon in several years.
Agreed! The lack of new releases on CD doesn't bother me a bit, since most new material is noise to me. I'm a little curious about Taylor Swift, though. I've never knowingly listened to any of her music (except once I heard her big hit "Shake It Up" or some such while exercising at a gym), so I don't really know what makes her music so appealing to so many people. I've thought about checking her out, but there's so much older material out there that I like a lot more (and tons more I haven't discovered yet), that I usually don't bother with music younger than I am.
I wonder, for a file whose sound quality is ruined by this DRM watermarking, is there a way of reversing the damage by somehow removing the watermark? I would think not, since it wouldn't be a problem, but with all these advanced new processing tools out there nowadays, maybe someone somewhere found a solution that doesn't involve re-recording every bad track using unadulterated sources?
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