Goran Tomas said:RolfTaylor said:Sgeirk said:AAC+ is becoming a new standard, for sure. 64 kbps AAC+, when processed well sounds better than 128 mp3.
You will find many disagree with this statement. It will be better with regards to "swishies" for sure.
<- - snip -->
I base this on the fact I have never clued into the "synthetic quality" of the high end despite having spent _lots_ of time listening to AAC+ (during product development) on headphones and good speakers. On the other hand, I know of several people who's opinion I trust (Goran and Cornelius for example) who not only hear it, but find it very annoying.
You are blessed!
Maybe it won't happen to you, though I suspect it eventually will... Once your brain "clues in" on the artificially synthesized high-end that always has the same texture to it, you will hear it every time you listen to HE-AAC. The higher bitrate helps to mask this a little bit, but it is essentially unavoidable with HE-AAC simply because the way the codec works.
Perhaps it's easiest to hear on the music that you really know well and listened to it on CD, that has a very nice and soft cymbals or hi-hat. If you are used to the original sound of the high-end and listen to it coded with HE-AAC (AAC+) even at 64 kbps or 96 kbps, you will hear the high-end that's completely different than the original. It will have harsh, metallic and "gritty" sound to it.
And if you play another song that in the original (WAV/CD) has a different texture of the high end, after being encoded with HE-AAC (AAC+) you will hear exactly the same texture of the high-end as in the previous song with soft hi-hats. That's the problem of HE-AAC. By design it's not transparent and it will never be and the high-end always has the same "gritty" texture to it.
AAC, on the other hand, can sound transparent and faithful to the original if used with at least 128 kbps.
HE-AAC creates an artificial high-end, which is how it can achieve wide frequency response at very low bitrates. That's what it was designed for. It was not designed to give high audio quality. It was designed to give wider frequency response at very low bitrates.
The marketing people and some manufacturers that use HE-AAC in their products, have then created this claim of 48 kbps or 64 kbps HE-AAC v2 sounding as good as _________ (fill in with whatever you consider good quality) to make a strong selling point. They've claimed (and still do) better than analog FM quality. Which is how 48 kbps HD Radio channels came about.
But it's not true and long-term listening will prove it. Just ask anybody who has listened to any form of digital radio that uses SBR technology in the encoder - HD Radio in USA, DAB+ in Australia, HE-AAC encoded satellite radio, HE-AAC encoded web streams...
We need to use higher bitrates (like 128 kbps) and codecs such as AAC in digital transmissions, to claim any level of audio quality that will match analog FM or CD quality.
Regards,
Goran Tomas
Goran,
You are so much like me from a listening standpoint. I can hear artifacting even in high bitrate scenarios. After my 6 month 'trial' of Sirius in my new vehicle, I cancelled because I could only listen for 30 minutes at a time tops...
I can also see compression in Dish, H.264, etc... I guess some of us are just real sensitive to it.
I had someone encode two songs of their choosing at 320K MP3 and double blind test me ten times. I picked the mp3 out of every single one. I guess it is a curse...