Why should it matter if it's a blind test or not would be my question....
Blinding is a basic tool to prevent conscious as well as subconscious bias in research. For example, in open taste tests comparing different product brands, consumers usually choose their regular brand. However, in blind taste tests, where the brand identities are concealed, consumers may favor a different brand.
Double-blind describes an especially stringent way of conducting an experiment, usually on human subjects, in an attempt to eliminate subjective bias on the part of both experimental subjects and the experimenters. In most cases, double-blind experiments are held to achieve a higher standard of scientific rigour.
Until you have one that is recorded from vinyl, played through a valve amp and using gold plated silver speaker leads, you won't have a true representation.Any of the long-time regulars whom I know are welcome to PM me which ones they think are which, if they want to test their skills I will eventually post the answers in this thread, unless of course 2008 just nails it on the first try.
I don't know how many times i have to say this, but even though i have lousy speakers, I DO notice a great magnitude of difference between an mp3 and the same track in wma lossless. I'd like to know why people keep on telling me i can't notice something when I actually do. When people try to tell me that I can't notice a difference when I actually can, for no good reason, it kind of pisses me off. Please don't make some completely retarded incorrect assumption about me.
I mean after all, wma lossless wouldn't exist if the average music listener like me couldn't tell the difference on $50k stereos, when in fact people with $20 headphones can probably tell the difference between an mp3 on myspace and the same track downloaded from music giants, or a cd track ripped in mp 3 vs wma lossless.
Until you have one that is recorded from vinyl, played through a valve amp and using gold plated silver speaker leads, you won't have a true representation.
Something that's already mastered with lots of compression, Death Metal stuff or Slayer, Slipknot etc. is usually great for that
What purpose would this test serve? Crap source + lossy compression = crap? Well yeah, crap in, crap out I don't think anyone will argue that using lossy compression against already over-compressed audio is going to do it any favors.
However, I think there's certainly merit in finding a fantastically mastered track with lots of dynamic range and a wide variety of instruments to demonstrate the potential weaknesses of these types of compression. In other words, in my opinion, it's not fair to pin "bad audio" on Lossy Compression when the source was shit to begin with -- but it's more than fair to pin "bad audio" on Lossy Compression when the source was good.
What purpose would this test serve? Crap source + lossy compression = crap? Well yeah, crap in, crap out I don't think anyone will argue that using lossy compression against already over-compressed audio is going to do it any favors.
Music with high entropy can have audible differences. An example is rock and roll with lots of distorting guitars, where cymbals start sounding distorted with a distinct hissing "ssss" sound instead of the crisp sound it should have. Stuff like Metallica, Slayer etc.
Exactly, thus I recommended the records mentioned previously - I have these as mp3 in my car and that with cymbals and missing harmonics really annoys me.