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Philip Sherburne: The 19 Best Earbuds for Every Budget (Pitchfork)
Philip Sherburne: The 19 Best Earbuds for Every Budget (Pitchfork)
Philip Sherburne asked for my opinion on earbuds for this article, and here it is! The Jabra Elite 65t is the current entry-level model, offering 5 hours of battery life (or up to 15 with the charging case), Bluetooth 5.0, wind noise reduction on calls, and three sizes of molded tips; it’s also rated IP55 waterproof. “I’ve used the Jabra Elite 65t daily for a few years,” says Portland, Oregon, web developer Matthew McVickar. “They’re considerably cheaper than AirPods and sound great, but the essential difference for me is that you can control volume, track skipping, and the hear-through—which amplifies the outside sound for better environmental awareness—with the on-earbud buttons.”
·pitchfork.com·
Philip Sherburne: The 19 Best Earbuds for Every Budget (Pitchfork)
Philip Sherburne: The 28 Best Wired Headphones for Every Budget (Pitchfork)
Philip Sherburne: The 28 Best Wired Headphones for Every Budget (Pitchfork)
Philip Sherburne asked for my opinion on headphones for this article, and here it is! Portland, Oregon, web developer Matthew McVickar says, “I have yet to find a pair of over-ear headphones that don't feel uncomfortable with glasses after more than half an hour or so, but I love the Sony MDR 7506.”
·pitchfork.com·
Philip Sherburne: The 28 Best Wired Headphones for Every Budget (Pitchfork)
Zoom Escaper
Zoom Escaper
Zoom Escaper is a tool to help you escape Zoom meetings and other videoconferencing scenarios. It allows you to self-sabotage your audio stream, making your presence unbearable to others.
·zoomescaper.com·
Zoom Escaper
Broken Orchestra Typewriter
Broken Orchestra Typewriter
Free download of samples made from a collection of broken instruments. The Broken Instruments Sample Pack is a free download of Found Sound Nation's favorite sounds from the Symphony for a Broken Orchestra Project.
·brokenorchestra.foundsoundnation.org·
Broken Orchestra Typewriter
Zimoun
Zimoun
Zimoun is a Swiss artist, composer and musician who's most known for his sound sculptures, sound architectures and installation art that combine raw, industrial materials with mechanical elements.
·zimoun.net·
Zimoun
Natural Sounds (U.S. National Park Service)
Natural Sounds (U.S. National Park Service)
Each national park has a unique soundscape. The natural and cultural sounds in parks awaken a sense of wonder that connects us to the qualities that define these special places. They are part of a web of resources that the National Park Service protects under the Organic Act. From the haunting calls of bugling elk in mountains to the patriotic calls of bugling horns across a historic battlefield, NPS invites you to experience our parks through this world of sound.
·nps.gov·
Natural Sounds (U.S. National Park Service)
Illusory sound texture reveals multi-second statistical completion in auditory scene analysis
Illusory sound texture reveals multi-second statistical completion in auditory scene analysis
Demonstrations of ‘illusory sound texture’—basically, your brain continuing to ‘hear’ a sound texture that doesn't exist while it is interrupted by another sound. From the paper abstract: Sound sources in the world are experienced as stable even when intermittently obscured, implying perceptual completion mechanisms that “fill in” missing sensory information. We demonstrate a filling-in phenomenon in which the brain extrapolates the statistics of background sounds (textures) over periods of several seconds when they are interrupted by another sound, producing vivid percepts of illusory texture.
·mcdermottlab.mit.edu·
Illusory sound texture reveals multi-second statistical completion in auditory scene analysis
Natalie Angier: New Ways Into the Brain’s ‘Music Room’ (NYT)
Natalie Angier: New Ways Into the Brain’s ‘Music Room’ (NYT)
Now researchers at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology have devised a radical new approach to brain imaging that reveals what past studies had missed. By mathematically analyzing scans of the auditory cortex and grouping clusters of brain cells with similar activation patterns, the scientists have identified neural pathways that react almost exclusively to the sound of music — any music. It may be Bach, bluegrass, hip-hop, big band, sitar or Julie Andrews. A listener may relish the sampled genre or revile it. No matter. When a musical passage is played, a distinct set of neurons tucked inside a furrow of a listener’s auditory cortex will fire in response. Other sounds, by contrast — a dog barking, a car skidding, a toilet flushing — leave the musical circuits unmoved.
·nytimes.com·
Natalie Angier: New Ways Into the Brain’s ‘Music Room’ (NYT)
ClickRepair: Audio Restoration
ClickRepair: Audio Restoration
ClickRepair is a mature, well-tested, application for declicking and decrackling audio in uncompressed audio files. It has been developed over a period of many years. There is an extensive user manual that is part of the download package. ClickRepair will not operate on compressed audio files, such as mp3, and there are no plans to incorporate such a feature.
·clickrepair.net·
ClickRepair: Audio Restoration
Jordan Kisner: The Dark Art of Mastering Music (Pitchfork)
Jordan Kisner: The Dark Art of Mastering Music (Pitchfork)
The mastering engineers I spoke to for this story kept using the same phrase when describing their job: “to make the song competitive in the marketplace.” That is, making the music sound better in audio quality—clearer, louder, more vibrant—than anything else out there. Traditionally, the “marketplace” has been radio, where a well-mastered song hits that sweet spot where you feel immersed in the music but not battered by it. If your song is poorly mastered, the logic goes, people won’t want to buy your album. Worse yet, they might switch stations. And now, the marketplace also includes online streaming, which has raised the popularity of listening to music on headphones or portable devices with lousy speakers—platforms that require their own kind of mastering.
·pitchfork.com·
Jordan Kisner: The Dark Art of Mastering Music (Pitchfork)
Patatap
Patatap
A portable animation and sound kit. With the touch of a finger create melodies charged with moving shapes.
·patatap.com·
Patatap
Robyn Flans: Classic Tracks: Phil Collins' "In the Air Tonight" (Mix Online)
Robyn Flans: Classic Tracks: Phil Collins' "In the Air Tonight" (Mix Online)
“One day, Phil was playing the drums and I had the reverse talkback on because he was speaking, and then he started playing the drums. The most unbelievable sound came out because of the heavy compressor. I said, ‘My God, this is the most amazing sound! Steve, listen to this.’”
·mixonline.com·
Robyn Flans: Classic Tracks: Phil Collins' "In the Air Tonight" (Mix Online)
NASA on SoundCloud
NASA on SoundCloud
Here's a collection of NASA sounds from historic spaceflights and current missions. You can hear the roar of a space shuttle launch or Neil Armstrong's "One small step for (a) man, one giant leap for mankind" every time you get a phone call if you make our sounds your ringtone. Or, you can hear the memorable words "Houston, we've had a problem," every time you make an error on your computer.
·soundcloud.com·
NASA on SoundCloud
Daniel Rapp: Spectroface
Daniel Rapp: Spectroface
I recently stumbled upon the face hidden in the spectrogram of the Aphex Twin track called "Equation". Intrigued, I decided to try my hand at recreating the effect here on the web.
·danielrapp.github.io·
Daniel Rapp: Spectroface
Mark Richardson: Does Vinyl Really Sound Better? (Pitchfork)
Mark Richardson: Does Vinyl Really Sound Better? (Pitchfork)
One of the often overlooked facts about LP reproduction is that some people prefer it because it introduces distortion. The "warmth" that many people associate with LPs can generally be described as a bass sound that is less accurate. Reproducing bass on vinyl is a serious engineering challenge, but the upshot is that there's a lot of filtering and signal processing happening to make the bass on vinyl work. You take some of this signal processing, add additional vibrations and distortions generated by a poorly manufactured turntable, and you end up with bass that sounds "warmer" than a CD, maybe-- but also very different than what the artists were hearing in the control room.
·pitchfork.com·
Mark Richardson: Does Vinyl Really Sound Better? (Pitchfork)
Jon Leidecker: Variations (UbuWeb Sound)
Jon Leidecker: Variations (UbuWeb Sound)
A seven part series history of appropriative collage in music, compositions made using recordings of older ones. It's a practice that in the '80s became known sampling — after the digital sampler — a breakthrough instrument which was designed to mimic traditional musical instruments by allowing the player to trigger recordings of them back on a keyboard. But it didn't take long for musicians to realize that the true strength of the sampler was the way in which it made it easy easy to collage and manipulate the best sounds from their favorite records into new pieces of music. This practice entered the popular mainstream by the 80s, long after observers had already identified collage as the defining new art form of the 20th century — and the roots of this music go back just as far. Over the course of this series, Leidecker looks at these roots, as appropriative collage developed across experimental and mainstream paths.
·ubu.com·
Jon Leidecker: Variations (UbuWeb Sound)
Eric Harvey: Paper Trail: ‘MP3: The Meaning of a Format’ (Pitchfork)
Eric Harvey: Paper Trail: ‘MP3: The Meaning of a Format’ (Pitchfork)
In his new book, Mp3: The Meaning of a Format, McGill University professor Jonathan Sterne exhaustively and eloquently traces the history of the mp3 from the initial hearing model developed in Bell Labs to the current debates about piracy. As the author argues, each time we rip a CD to our hard drives, we're not only saving space in our living rooms or ensuring we have the appropriate gym soundtrack, but also reaffirming a fundamental idea about the limits of human perception.
·pitchfork.com·
Eric Harvey: Paper Trail: ‘MP3: The Meaning of a Format’ (Pitchfork)
Eric Harvey: More from my interview with Jonathan Sterne.
Eric Harvey: More from my interview with Jonathan Sterne.
I interviewed Jonathan Sterne for Pitchfork about his new book. While conducting the interview, I thought Pitchfork readers would like to know about how AT&T’s capitalistic policies in the 1910s and 1920s laid the groundwork for those compressed bits of data currently clogging their hard drives, and other gentle, science-laden facts about the mp3’s history. I was wrong. But not to worry! Here are the cut bits.
·marathonpacks.tumblr.com·
Eric Harvey: More from my interview with Jonathan Sterne.
Jono Buchanan: Understanding Compression (Resident Advisor)
Jono Buchanan: Understanding Compression (Resident Advisor)
Great explanation. I intend to use this bit: By placing a compressor after the reverb and assigning the lead vocal sound as a side-chain trigger for the compressor, the reverb level will drop whenever the vocal part is performing but rise whenever a phrase finishes, providing long reverb times in gaps but apparently smaller levels when the vocal is in full flow.
·residentadvisor.net·
Jono Buchanan: Understanding Compression (Resident Advisor)
T.J. Moir: Auckland North Shore Hum
T.J. Moir: Auckland North Shore Hum
The Hum. ‘For some time now there appears to be certain people who have sensitive hearing that can hear a low frequency humming noise late at night or in the early hours of the morning. The problem appears to be all over the North Shore of Auckland. We don't know the origin of the generic hum which appears to be world-wide.’
·speechresearch.co.nz·
T.J. Moir: Auckland North Shore Hum