Hi, On Wednesday 21 April 2010 03:34:38 Ken Restivo wrote: > Kind of a general mastering question, but obligatory Linux screenshots of > JAPA are included, I promise. > I've noticed with some professional cd's/oggs/mp3s I have, the high end is > rolled off at around 20Khz. > The question is: why do they roll off like that, and is there some reason I > should do it in this day and age? Ogg and mp3 roll off before the nyquist-frequency because of their algorithm. So I wouldn't take that as a reference. CD's actually don't cut off sharp at the nyquist-frequency of half the sampling-rate. The highest frequency possible to reproduce -with correct amplitude- is half the sampling-rate _only_ if the phase is aligned to the sampling-clock so that minima/maxima of the sinus are correctly sampled. If its out of phase, the amplitude is not reproduced correctly. It is easy to understand that this correlation between phase and correct amplitude also affects frequencies below half the sampling-rate. Might be as low as quarter of the sampling-rate, which in case of the CD is 11kHz. Below that you will have more then four samples to reproduce the sinus wave. That is in fact another reason to do the recording, mixing and mastering in more then 44kHz... Your own music is probably done in 48kHz sampling-rate which moves this effect upward (into the region japa is not showing you). Down-sampling to 44kHz will introduce the roll-off in the range you see. Have fun, Arnold
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