In the Age of MP3s, Sound Quality is Worse Than Ever
   
  David  Bendeth, a producer who works with rock bands like Hawthorne Heights  and Paramore, knows that the albums he makes are often played through  tiny computer speakers by fans who are busy surfing the Internet. So  he’s not surprised when record labels ask the mastering engineers who  work on his CDs to crank up the sound levels so high that even the soft  parts sound loud. 
  Over  the past decade and a half, a revolution in recording technology has  changed the way albums are produced, mixed and mastered — almost always  for the worse. “They make it loud to get [listeners'] attention,”  Bendeth says. Engineers do that by applying dynamic range compression,  which reduces the difference between the loudest and softest sounds in a  song. Like many of his peers, Bendeth believes that relying too much on  this effect can obscure sonic detail, rob music of its emotional power  and leave listeners with what engineers call ear fatigue. “I think most  everything is mastered a little too loud,” Bendeth says. “The industry  decided that it’s a volume contest.”
  Producers  and engineers call this “the loudness war,” and it has changed the way  almost every new pop and rock album sounds. But volume isn’t the only  issue. Computer programs like Pro Tools, which let audio engineers  manipulate sound the way a word processor edits text, make musicians  sound unnaturally perfect. And today’s listeners consume an increasing  amount of music on MP3, which eliminates much of the data from the  original CD file and can leave music sounding tinny or hollow. “With all  the technical innovation, music sounds worse,” says Steely Dan’s Donald  Fagen, who has made what are considered some of the best-sounding  records of all time. “God is in the details. But there are no details  anymore.”
   
  The  idea that engineers make albums louder might seem strange: Isn’t volume  controlled by that knob on the stereo? Yes, but every setting on that  dial delivers a range of loudness, from a hushed vocal to a kick drum —  and pushing sounds toward the top of that range makes music seem louder.  It’s the same technique used to make television commercials stand out  from shows. And it does grab listeners’ attention — but at a price. Last  year, Bob Dylan told Rolling Stone that modern albums “have sound all over them. There’s no definition of nothing, no vocal, no nothing, just like — static.”
  In  2004, Jeff Buckley’s mom, Mary Guibert, listened to the original  three-quarter-inch tape of her son’s recordings as she was preparing the  tenth-anniversary reissue of Grace. “We were hearing  instruments you’ve never heard on that album, like finger cymbals and  the sound of viola strings being plucked,” she remembers. “It blew me  away because it was exactly what he heard in the studio.”
  To  Guibert’s disappointment, the remastered 2004 version failed to capture  these details. So last year, when Guibert assembled the best-of  collection So Real: Songs From Jeff Buckley, she insisted on an  independent A&R consultant to oversee the reissue process and a  mastering engineer who would reproduce the sound Buckley made in the  studio. “You can hear the distinct instruments and the sound of the  room,” she says of the new release. “Compression smudges things  together.” 
  Too  much compression can be heard as musical clutter; on the Arctic  Monkeys’ debut, the band never seems to pause to catch its breath. By  maintaining constant intensity, the album flattens out the emotional  peaks that usually stand out in a song. “You lose the power of the  chorus, because it’s not louder than the verses,” Bendeth says. “You  lose emotion.”
  The  inner ear automatically compresses blasts of high volume to protect  itself, so we associate compression with loudness, says Daniel Levitin, a  professor of music and neuroscience at McGill University and author of  “This Is Your Brain on Music: The Science of a Human Obsession.” Human  brains have evolved to pay particular attention to loud noises, so  compressed sounds initially seem more exciting. But the effect doesn’t  last. “The excitement in music comes from variation in rhythm, timbre,  pitch and loudness,” Levitin says. “If you hold one of those constant,  it can seem monotonous.” After a few minutes, research shows, constant  loudness grows fatiguing to the brain. Though few listeners realize this  consciously, many feel an urge to skip to another song.
  “If  you limit range, it’s just an assault on the body,” says Tom Coyne, a  mastering engineer who has worked with Mary J. Blige and Nas. “When  you’re fifteen, it’s the greatest thing — you’re being hammered. But do  you want that on a whole album?”
  To  an average listener, a wide dynamic range creates a sense of  spaciousness and makes it easier to pick out individual instruments — as  you can hear on recent albums such as Dylan’s Modern Times and Norah Jones’ Not Too Late.  “When people have the courage and the vision to do a record that way,  it sets them apart,” says Joe Boyd, who produced albums by Richard  Thompson and R.E.M.’s Fables of the Reconstruction. “It sounds warm, it sounds three-dimensional, it sounds different. Analog sound to me is more emotionally affecting.”
   
  Rock  and pop producers have always used compression to balance the sounds of  different instruments and to make music sound more exciting, and radio  stations apply compression for technical reasons. In the days of vinyl  records, there was a physical limit to how high the bass levels could go  before the needle skipped a groove. CDs can handle higher levels of  loudness, although they, too, have a limit that engineers call “digital  zero dB,” above which sounds begin to distort. Pop albums rarely got  close to the zero-dB mark until the mid-1990s, when digital compressors  and limiters, which cut off the peaks of sound waves, made it easier to  manipulate loudness levels. Intensely compressed albums like Oasis’ 1995  (What’s the Story) Morning Glory? set a new bar for loudness;  the songs were well-suited for bars, cars and other noisy environments.  “In the Seventies and Eighties, you were expected to pay attention,”  says Matt Serletic, the former chief executive of Virgin Records USA,  who also produced albums by Matchbox Twenty and Collective Soul. “Modern  music should be able to get your attention.” Adds Rob Cavallo, who  produced Green Day’s American Idiot and My Chemical Romance’s The Black Parade,  “It’s a style that started post-grunge, to get that intensity. The idea  was to slam someone’s face against the wall. You can set your CD to  stun.” 
  It’s  not just new music that’s too loud. Many remastered recordings suffer  the same problem as engineers apply compression to bring them into line  with modern tastes. The new Led Zeppelin collection, Mothership, is louder than the band’s original albums, and Bendeth, who mixed Elvis Presley’s 30 #1 Hits,  says that the album was mastered too loud for his taste. “A lot of  audiophiles hate that record,” he says, “but people can play it in the  car and it’s competitive with the new Foo Fighters record.”
   
  Just  as CDs supplanted vinyl and cassettes, MP3 and other digital-music  formats are quickly replacing CDs as the most popular way to listen to  music. That means more convenience but worse sound. To create an MP3, a  computer samples the music on a CD and compresses it into a smaller file  by excluding the musical information that the human ear is less likely  to notice. Much of the information left out is at the very high and low  ends, which is why some MP3s sound flat. Cavallo says that MP3s don’t  reproduce reverb well, and the lack of high-end detail makes them sound  brittle. Without enough low end, he says, “you don’t get the punch  anymore. It decreases the punch of the kick drum and how the speaker  gets pushed when the guitarist plays a power chord.”
  But  not all digital-music files are created equal. Levitin says that most  people find MP3s ripped at a rate above 224 kbps virtually  indistinguishable from CDs. (iTunes sells music as either 128 or 256  kbps AAC files — AAC is slightly superior to MP3 at an equivalent bit  rate. Amazon sells MP3s at 256 kbps.) Still, “it’s like going to the  Louvre and instead of the Mona Lisa there’s a 10-megapixel image of it,”  he says. “I always want to listen to music the way the artists wanted  me to hear it. I wouldn’t look at a Kandinsky painting with sunglasses  on.”
  Producers  also now alter the way they mix albums to compensate for the  limitations of MP3 sound. “You have to be aware of how people will hear  music, and pretty much everyone is listening to MP3,” says producer  Butch Vig, a member of Garbage and the producer of Nirvana’s Nevermind.  “Some of the effects get lost. So you sometimes have to over-exaggerate  things.” Other producers believe that intensely compressed CDs make for  better MP3s, since the loudness of the music will compensate for the  flatness of the digital format. 
  As  technological shifts have changed the way sounds are recorded, they  have encouraged an artificial perfection in music itself. Analog tape  has been replaced in most studios by Pro Tools, making edits that once  required splicing tape together easily done with the click of a mouse.  Programs like Auto-Tune can make weak singers sound pitch-perfect, and  Beat Detective does the same thing for wobbly drummers.
  “You  can make anyone sound professional,” says Mitchell Froom, a producer  who’s worked with Elvis Costello and Los Lobos, among others. “But the  problem is that you have something that’s professional, but it’s not  distinctive. I was talking to a session drummer, and I said, ‘When’s the  last time you could tell who the drummer is?’ You can tell Keith Moon  or John Bonham, but now they all sound the same.”
   
  So  is music doomed to keep sounding worse? Awareness of the problem is  growing. The South by Southwest music festival recently featured a panel  titled “Why Does Today’s Music Sound Like Shit?” In August, a group of  producers and engineers founded an organization called Turn Me Up!,  which proposes to put stickers on CDs that meet high sonic standards.
  But  even most CD listeners have lost interest in high-end stereos as  surround-sound home theater systems have become more popular, and  superior-quality disc formats like DVD-Audio and SACD flopped. Bendeth  and other producers worry that young listeners have grown so used to  dynamically compressed music and the thin sound of MP3s that the battle  has already been lost. “CDs sound better, but no one’s buying them,” he  says. “The age of the audiophile is over.”
  Robert Levine
  (taken from beatpatrol.wordpress.com)