stormy01 said:
Perhaps we have been "dumbed down" with today's audio
You could start a whole 'nother thread just on the above subject alone, taking broadcasting out of the mix.
We have CDs with seemingly infinite dynamic range, yet modern music discs are compressed to a few dB of their life, worse than many CHR stations of yore. With the advent of little mp3 players, we've lost an entire bit of depth due to lossy compression, not to mention practically all spectral energy above 16 kHz (I'm sure newer codecs are better, but the gold standard mp3 format pretty much filters out everything "they" claim "you" can't hear.)
I've actually heard
more complaints about movie soundtracks than praise for the incredible dynamic range. A lot of people would rather not flip on the stereo because "the dialog is too quiet and the kabooms too loud"
!
It's almost ironic to me, then, that AM and its current lo-fi status is so heavily shunned when it comes to music format. It seems the general populace has overwhelmingly voted that they prefer over-compressed, lo-fi, fatiguing audio to high-quality, pristine stuff with high dynamic range. And yet no one will listen to a good AM station?
Just as the transistor radio age and the NRSC mask spelled the end of good quality AM radio, the portable music device is spelling the end of decent audio. One need look no further than the near-ubiquitous iPod™ with it's sub-par amplifier as proof. The Microsoft Zune™ doesn't even have a graphic equalizer anymore; apparently people are too stupid to understand the concept of them? Who knows what they think.
And don't get me started on the cadre of tin-eared engineers out there. Seems like for every one who wants their station to sound its best, there's one more who doesn't know a thing about decent sound processing/quality. I may not know the settings to make an Omnia sizzle, but I do know what crap sounds like and sadly, on both AM and FM, there's a lot of crap. So it doesn't surprise me in the least that such a powerful AM in such an interesting market would be left to rot.
Sorry for the digression.