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Why bother?

OK, I'm getting real tired of trying to stream radio stations with a bitrate so low, it's unlistenable. Why bother paying the additional music royalties when you won't upgrade the streaming to make it listenable.

Is it expensive to upgrade the bitrate? What would the additional costs be? The purchase of a new server?
 
There is a cost to streaming at a higher bit rate, but it's relatively small. Raw bandwidth at the wholesale level doesn't cost much. A radio stream at 192 kbps would cost about 1 cent per hour in bandwidth to serve one listener. At 96kbps, it becomes half a penny per listener-hour.

That can add up if you have a ton of listeners. But even still, the music royalty (SoundExchange) is much larger, at about 3.5 cents per listener-hour for a music format.
 
I run Phat Beats Radio playing Rap RnB Soul Funk Reggae Chillhop Acid Jazz Ambient Triphop Blues from the 1970s to early 2000s streaming at 256k OGG with Stereotool and good settings. My station sound better than 90% to 94% internet radio station check my signature for more info.

I know of 2 decent host you can get 265kbp or 320kbp AAC or OGG for $5 to $10 a month if you want to run a internet radio station and you can not afford this you should not run a internet radio station. IMO internet radio station min should be streaming at 256kbps if they want to compete with Spotify Deezer and Tidal.
 
For the longest time, we fed one of our streams with 48K AAC plus for people with slower internet and that also fed some of our FM signals. It was "ok". Wasnt great but "ok" because at some of our sites, thats all the bandwith we had available. Theyre all on 128k mp3 now and might move to 256K aac plus at some point.
 
OK, I'm getting real tired of trying to stream radio stations with a bitrate so low, it's unlistenable. Why bother paying the additional music royalties when you won't upgrade the streaming to make it listenable.

Is it expensive to upgrade the bitrate? What would the additional costs be? The purchase of a new server?
It comes down to one major thing... 99% of the potential listeners do not notice a difference.
 
It comes down to one major thing... 99% of the potential listeners do not notice a difference.

This is always radio's answer. If they think listeners will settle for less, they'll give them as little as possible.

I'd actually like to know where you came up with that 99% statistic. If 99% of the potential listeners truly do not notice a difference, why have all the streaming services like Apple Music, Spotify and the rest invested in lossless quality for their streams??

Streamers keep improving the quality of their product while radio keeps going the other direction in every possible way. Broadcasters seem to think it doesn't matter, and then they wonder why the audience is shrinking. Why do you think that is?
 
This is always radio's answer. If they think listeners will settle for less, they'll give them as little as possible.
There's a difference between thinking listeners will settle and knowing they won't. Most people do not have a sensitivity to differences in bandwidth than those that are more "music obsessed". And those that are more "music obsessed" are also the ones more likely to be posting on a radio messageboard.

I'm one of those that cannot tell the difference in a stream bitrate. It also takes a lot for a difference in radio station processing to be noticed. Only the really good or the really bad such as a Voltaire turned up to 25 can I tell.

And the streamers need those niche listeners to profit off of, but I guarantee the majority of those subscribers don't care. If they did, all audio would be distributed in .flac files only and not MP3.
 
The people I speak with in the music business say that if bitrate is an issue, then you should buy physical copies. Preferably vinyl. They still sell physical copies for that reason. When I go to audiophile events, the music is all vinyl. Yes they're outliers. But that's what real music people do. There are all kinds of audio issues with digital that don't exist if you go back to the physical copies. That way you're supporting the artists, and the music doesn't pass through all kinds of alien pathways.
 
I have taken LP's (Vinyl), run them through a high bit rate converter, and then burned the results after removing clicks manually out to CD. The results are indistinguishable form the original Vinyl. I believe the issue is with the engineering of modern CD's and not the fact that the media is digital.
 
I'm one of those that cannot tell the difference in a stream bitrate. It also takes a lot for a difference in radio station processing to be noticed. Only the really good or the really bad such as a Voltaire turned up to 25 can I tell.

And the streamers need those niche listeners to profit off of, but I guarantee the majority of those subscribers don't care. If they did, all audio would be distributed in .flac files only and not MP3.

Audio is radio's product, it's what they're supposed to be selling. I have never understood how so many radio stations deprioritize its quality. Where there used to be real competition for which radio station had the best sound, now it's about how high can you turn up the Voltaire or compress the stream, consequences be damned

Lots of people still care about sound quality, that's why the streamers have invested in lossless even if it's a placebo effect and the audience can't really hear the difference. One thing is certain though, once the bitrate becomes low enough, anyone can hear that swishy, hollow sounding audio degradation. I hear it all the time, on low-bitrate streams, on SiriusXM, on HD Radio (especially subchannels), and even on analog FM when the transmitter is being fed a garbage source. It might not rise to the top of some listeners' consciousness, but with radio it's death by a thousand cuts. When you add bad audio on top of everything else and think no one will notice or care, well they will and they do.

The people I speak with in the music business say that if bitrate is an issue, then you should buy physical copies.

Well yes of course the people you speak to in the music business would say that, it's in their interest to sell records. But the fact that people buy vinyl just goes to show sound quality still matters.
 
I'd actually like to know where you came up with that 99% statistic. If 99% of the potential listeners truly do not notice a difference, why have all the streaming services like Apple Music, Spotify and the rest invested in lossless quality for their streams??
That's a tremendous question. Lossless doesn't make a ton of sense to me, because the audience who is listening to Spotify and using decent quality wired headphones (or speakers) has to be tiny.

I was a long time holdout using wired headphones. Then I stopped buying the cheapest JBL bluetooth headphones and have been much happier. But of course bluetooth headphones limit the possible audio quality.
 
Interesting responses, everyone. Thank you.

For starters I don't consider myself an audiophile. I value clarity without the garbly tinny sound. I don't use expensive speakers, (Pioneer bookshelf set that was less than $200) and I stream with high speed internet.

However, I can tell when the kbps is under 128. And I find it to hard to believe that 99% of the population doesn't notice the difference.

Here are two different streams. One is noticeably under 128 kbps and the other is obviously more than. Now tell me you don't notice a difference. Yes two different genres of music, but that shouldn't matter.


 
I do hear a difference. KGAY sounds a lot better to me. Better stereo separation, more dynamic range, and nice bass emphasis, given the format.

KIYQ happened to be playing "Baker Street" when I first tuned in, and Gerry Rafferty's saxophone solo sounded lifeless to me. They later played Elton John's "Crocodile Rock", which also sounded wrong. When well processed, the synthesizer pops out in contrast to Sir Elton's vocal, and that didn't happen on KIYQ's stream.

So our readers will be surprised to learn that KGAY is using the lower bitrate. 64 kbps vs 192 kbps.

KIYQ appears to be using the obsolete MP2 format. This was popular in the early 90s, but was quickly replaced by MP3 in most applications, because MP3 was more efficient, which mattered on the small hard drives and slow connections of the day.
KGAY is using AAC, which is much more tolerant of low bit rates. I don't hear anything in the way of codec artifacts. But like Lance, I'm not very sensitive to those.
 
Agreed. I semi local FM station to me had a show I wanted to check out. I can't pick it up on the radio, so I tried their online stream. The sound quality was so bad I turned it off midway through the first song. My station is only 128 kbps but compared to their stream sounds like a finely tuned Chevy V-8.
Here's mine at 128 kbps
 
So our readers will be surprised to learn that KGAY is using the lower bitrate. 64 kbps vs 192 kbps.

KIYQ appears to be using the obsolete MP2 format. This was popular in the early 90s, but was quickly replaced by MP3 in most applications, because MP3 was more efficient, which mattered on the small hard drives and slow connections of the day.

KGAY is using AAC, which is much more tolerant of low bit rates. I don't hear anything in the way of codec artifacts. But like Lance, I'm not very sensitive to those.

For library playout (disk storage) purposes, the MP2 format running at its maximum bitrate (384 kbit/s) was generally preferred to MP3 at any bitrate. If memory serves, the reason was that its comparatively simplistic psychoacoustic model stood up better to subsequent multiband processing as well as to subsequent transcoding with different codecs such as for internet streaming. Some also believed the audible artifacts MP2 created at its highest bitrate were less objectionable to the ear than the audible artifacts MP3 created at its best bitrates. See the posts here by @weskeene for example.

That said, my stream capture tool (ffmpeg/ffprobe) says that KIYQ's 192 kbit/s stream is in the MP3 format. Perhaps your software was being extra-specific and gave more technical information like "MPEG-2 Layer III" and you misread that as MP2? (MP3, i.e. Layer 3 audio, can exist wrapped in either MPEG1 or MPEG2 containers.) In any event, whatever the problem is with KIYQ's stream, the cause is probably something before the MP3 encoding stage. Perhaps their stream's MP3 encoder is located in the cloud, and they're uplinking a very low bitrate source stream to it without realizing? Because https://files.catbox.moe/du4bp0.mp3 is what it sounded like when I listened in (captured by ffmpeg without transcoding or re-encoding), and that degree of artifacting is impossible for the MP3 codec to produce at 192 kbit/s. Not just all those watery, slushy highs, but those gurgling mids. I'm almost positive there's a middleman codec involved here that's running at a terrible bitrate. They also have a problem with analog AC buzzing on their stream. :(

Anyway, with an input to their 192 kbit/s MP3 encoder that's already so charred, it's no surprise that KGAY's 64 kbit/s HE-AAC encoder sounds comparatively wonderful.
 
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MP2 at 192 kbps shouldn't sound objectionably bad. That's actually near the top end for what European DAB stations are using -- some are as low as 64 kbps. The HE-AAC codec that DAB+ uses was supposed to improve quality, but instead stations have used it to make their bitrates even lower, often 32 kbps.
 
MP2 at 192 kbps shouldn't sound objectionably bad. That's actually near the top end for what European DAB stations are using -- some are as low as 64 kbps. The HE-AAC codec that DAB+ uses was supposed to improve quality, but instead stations have used it to make their bitrates even lower, often 32 kbps.
UK: hold my beer. We have a couple of music stations at 24kbps. At that point, you have to assume the business case is for them to exist for discoverability and to point people to a stream - nobody is going to listen to that crap day in, day out.
 
MP2 at 192 kbps shouldn't sound objectionably bad. That's actually near the top end for what European DAB stations are using -- some are as low as 64 kbps. The HE-AAC codec that DAB+ uses was supposed to improve quality, but instead stations have used it to make their bitrates even lower, often 32 kbps.
If you would like to experiment with making your own MP2 encodings toward that end, https://www.rarewares.org/mp3-others.php has archival copies of several command line MP2 encoders for Windows:

https://www.rarewares.org/files/mp3/mp2enc.zip
https://www.rarewares.org/files/mp3/tooLAME0.2l.zip
https://www.rarewares.org/files/mp3/twolame0.3.12b.zip
https://www.rarewares.org/files/mp3/twolame-0.4.0-x86.zip

I've ordered the links above from oldest to newest as far as their refinement and evolution go, so allegedly, the best encodings would be possible with the final one, although it might still be fun to experiment with the earliest one, good old MP2Enc from 2002.

If you really want to dive into the world of the esoteric, https://www.rarewares.org/rrw/programs.php even has a small handful of MP1 encoders available for tinkering.

There is a cost to streaming at a higher bit rate, but it's relatively small. Raw bandwidth at the wholesale level doesn't cost much. A radio stream at 192 kbps would cost about 1 cent per hour in bandwidth to serve one listener. At 96kbps, it becomes half a penny per listener-hour. That can add up if you have a ton of listeners.
Does anybody still run their own, dedicated servers with self-managed Icecast and Shoutcast installations? Many datacenters now offer unmetered bandwidth at speeds of 1, 10, or more gigabits per second. Besides iHeart's ihrhls.com and streamtheworld.com, and Audacy's abacast.net, the most common large-scale audio streaming hosts I regularly see radio stations using today are securenetsystems.net, streamguys.com, Voscast, and Live365. But those all offer "premium" levels of service, beyond "plain vanilla" Icecast and Shoutcast daemon hosting. So you end up paying hourly listener pricing with them.

But even still, the music royalty (SoundExchange) is much larger, at about 3.5 cents per listener-hour for a music format.
That adds up even faster -- to insolvency. I thought rackets designed to price out small competitors were supposed to be illegal. :(

Theyre all on 128k mp3 now and might move to 256K aac plus at some point.
Did you mean AAC-LC? AACPlus (a.k.a. HE-AAC) will sound worse than AAC-LC at 256 kbit/s.

(Sometimes I think Fraunhofer was unwise naming the full fidelity version of AAC "low complexity." AAC-LC is only low complexity compared to the number of tricks AACPlus needs to implement to synthesize all of the treble. At 256 kbit/s, AAC-LC has plenty of bandwidth to convey the original treble with near-lossless quality -- definitely better sounding than a synthesized substitute.)

It comes down to one major thing... 99% of the potential listeners do not notice a difference.
99% is a cynical figure. I don't know what the actual percentage is that notices the difference. But I think it's enough to make the effort to satisfy them worthwhile. The proof is in the historical things radio did to satisfy that same audience segment. Like stations replacing their vinyl libraries with CD reissues. And eliminating carts for digital playout. And dumping suck-and-pump monoband processing for multiband Optimods (including spending big money as every new generation appeared, from the 8100 XT/2 on up through the 8700 and now beyond). Most listeners in noisy car interiors with non-premium sound systems, or listening through boomboxes or table radios, probably scarcely noticed any of the differences each of these incremental upgrades made. But the industry still made those changes to earn the extra ratings points from the listeners who did notice. In consideration of that, why would ditching the outmoded dial-up bitrates and codecs many stations still cling to today work out any less favorably? The people who're now eating radio's breakfast, lunch, and dinner, like Spotify and iTunes, have been delivering 256 kbit/s AAC-LC for a long time now. And in the last month or two, Spotify has been offering lossless streaming at no extra cost. Their research must be telling them these quality levels do matter to enough of their users to make their implementation and costs worthwhile. It should go without saying that given their comparatively massive global CDN and bandwidth bills, they wouldn't donate one solitary extra bit to their listeners' ears if enough of them weren't noticing and sticking around for the difference.

And the streamers need those niche listeners to profit off of, but I guarantee the majority of those subscribers don't care. If they did, all audio would be distributed in .flac files only and not MP3.
Except that 256 kbit/s AAC-LC is the default for everybody who pays for just the entry-level tiers on platforms like Spotify. It isn't held back as a premium bitrate that costs extra. Even Spotify's new lossless option, again, is now available at no extra charge. This must mean they're seeing enough demand among that majority to moot the increased costs.

Most people do not have a sensitivity to differences in bandwidth than those that are more "music obsessed". And those that are more "music obsessed" are also the ones more likely to be posting on a radio messageboard.
I don't think they're necessarily music obsessed in most of those cases; they're just ordinary listeners who happen to be more affected by old codecs and low bitrates than most. Often to the point of discomfort. That said, you don't have to cause people outright discomfort with your bitrate and codec choices for them to still notice the differences -- and for them to tune away from the inferior choices. For example, if you A/B compared synchronized 64 kbit/s HE-AAC and 256 kbit/s AAC-LC versions of the same songs through quality speakers to groups of people with undamaged hearing, most wouldn't understand why the latter versions sounded better, but they would start picking up on the differences between the A (64) and B (256) versions as they continued listening. Eventually they would decide they preferred the latter versions. This is no different than when those old electronics chains like Circuit City and The Good Guys had big showrooms filled with "real" stereo systems with large speakers on display in big acoustic listening rooms. People would spend decent chunks of time standing in front of those systems, comparing them all against each other until identifying the one with "the best sound." Most of those customers never knew anything about the reasons their choices sounded the best -- stuff like amplifier classes and phase linearity. But they knew which one was "the best" after enough listening, and barring things like missing critical features, they bought it. It's no different with streaming. With time and in the aggregate, people will notice that Spotify and iTunes sound "the best" compared to radio stations who're shooting themselves in the feet with discount bitrates and obsolete codecs. Eventually, that will contribute to lost listenership.

I'm one of those that cannot tell the difference in a stream bitrate. It also takes a lot for a difference in radio station processing to be noticed. Only the really good or the really bad such as a Voltaire turned up to 25 can I tell.
Everyone is different. One of the big kerfuffles that previously happened in the world of radio audio -- the clipper aliasing distortion problems the Optimod 8200 allegedly had -- was never discernible to my ears. Lots of people were swearing up and down during the 8200's heyday that its clippers sounded like digital grunge. But with almost every form of popular music, I couldn't hear anything wrong with the 8200's sound. And this was at the point in my life where I could still hear to 20 kHz and distinguish lossless CDs from 320 kbits MP3 encodes almost all of the time.

I think the lesson is that whenever psychoacoustic things are done to audio, groups rather than individuals must listen for audible defects, because no single set of ears can ever be trusted to decide if the audio is okay. If even 1 in 10 people hears something odd, you can assume that 10% of your audience will hear something odd too, and that some subset of that 10% will hear something awful and bail for a better-sounding competitor.

UK: hold my beer. We have a couple of music stations at 24kbps. At that point, you have to assume the business case is for them to exist for discoverability and to point people to a stream - nobody is going to listen to that crap day in, day out.
US: beer held. I can't even summon the words to describe how insane 24 kbit/s MP2 for music is. But I doubt discoverability is the motivation. How many listeners would realize the cause was a low MP2 bitrate DAB broadcast as opposed to just assuming "the station" sounded that way, whether listening on-air or via the internet stream?
 
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Did you mean AAC-LC? AACPlus (a.k.a. HE-AAC) will sound worse than AAC-LC at 256 kbit/s.

(Sometimes I think Fraunhofer was unwise naming the full fidelity version of AAC "low complexity." AAC-LC is only low complexity compared to the number of tricks AACPlus needs to implement to synthesize all of the treble. At 256 kbit/s, AAC-LC has plenty of bandwidth to convey the original treble with near-lossless quality -- definitely better sounding than a synthesized substitute.)
256 AAC Plus. I did a live remote with that from a park for 2 days and it sounded fantastic on air here.
 


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