Goran Tomas said:chriscollins said:Jack Griffin said:1. WAV (naturally)
2. Lossless codecs (FLAC, APE, etc)
3. MP2 at VERY high bitrates (384 kb/sec)
4. MP3
High bit .mp2 sounds better than .mp3 to me as well.
MP2 is also less sensitive to cascading with another codec that might happen down the line... As is AAC (LC). MP3 is actually the worse bit reduction codec you can use...
chriscollins said:Our only mp3 is the commercials, which is the norm now... I do blow them back to .wav, as my Automation is happier with .wav. When a file gets blown up in my building, it gets a special tag I can search that shows MP3SOURCE.
That's an excellent practice! So many WAVs (and even FLACs) originate from poor MP3 files and people assume just because it's WAV, it's good audio quality. Unfortunately, that's no guarantee. Quite often you can tell by the poor sound and the artifacts, but people on the station just don't bother to listen or are not sensitive to that (which doesn't mean your listeners aren't!). So having a tag is a very useful technique.
Regards,
Goran Tomas
I actually came up with that idea in the early days of digital delivery. Music would 'leak' to us from the promo people as mp3. Then, when I got the CD, I would have a method to know to replace it. Now, it is normal to get .wav at the same time, but I left all my mp3 import rules the same, so I still get the tagging.