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Apple Lossless

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BeoJosh
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BeoJosh Posted: Mon, May 17 2021 9:24 PM

Apple today announced Apple Lossless for Apple Music, with Hi-Res up to 24/192, coming in June to 20m songs, with the rest of the 75m song catalog by the end of the year. Doubt it'll work over AP but reports say it will play on Apple TV. Details/specifics are still sparse, but I'm very curious to see how this might work--and sound--on our B&O equipment....

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Frederik
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Frederik replied on Mon, May 17 2021 11:53 PM

As far as I know AirPlay already uses ALAC 44/16 which is lossless relative to CD quality. So in principle if you stream a lossless track at 44/16 to any AirPlay enabled B&O speaker you should experience "better" quality compared to the current 256 AAC. Better is however relative, most people cannot hear the difference, you can do an ABX test for yourself here: http://abx.digitalfeed.net/itunes.html

Regarding hi-res, with 44kHz sample rate you can represent signals up to 22kHz without any loss. Higher sample rates do not make sense for consumption because no-one hears higher tones. It does make sense for production however, because it gives you more editing headroom. It also makes sense for animals but only if your speakers can reproduce tones over 22kHz which is again uncommon. For bit depth it's a little bit more complicated, but again, most studies will show that there is no perceptual difference by increasing the bit depth over 16bit.

Headphones will not support lossless over Bluetooth. For the H95 I am not sure if it can decode ALAC wired.

Spatial audio converts multichannel audio to stereo in such a way that your ears will be tricked to experience motion and depth by introducing latency between left and right. From what I read so far, Apple will do this on the player side (Mac or iPhone) meaning that any headphone should be able to reproduce the effect.

Antonius Robin Iriawan
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BeoJosh:

Apple today announced Apple Lossless for Apple Music, with Hi-Res up to 24/192, coming in June to 20m songs, with the rest of the 75m song catalog by the end of the year. Doubt it'll work over AP but reports say it will play on Apple TV. Details/specifics are still sparse, but I'm very curious to see how this might work--and sound--on our B&O equipment....

I have been listening my lossless music through Airplay 2. My music files are in AIFF 16/44.1. So, I believe I could answer your question regarding sound quality.

So far, it sounds amazing. It sounds lively and music feels like it has a soul. However, I believe you will still get a better sound quality through a CD Plater or a turntable. Nevertheless, don't worry about the sound quality. 

Best Regards, Mit freundlichen Grüßen, 감사합니다
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BeoFrederic
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As noted in the replies above, Airplay 2 supports streaming of FLAC & ALAC files at 16/44.1.  I believe resolution up to 24/48 is supported.  So any B&O speaker that supports AP2 should be able to playback 'Apple Music Lossless.'

However, I'm pretty sure that AP2 doesn't support any higher resolutions, so 'Apple Music Hi-Res Lossless' streaming is a non-starter for our non-wired B&O products.

This situation is problematic for Apple's own products. much less 3PP, leading me to believe that there's an 'Airplay 3' up ahead somewhere.  The WWDC is first week of June.

If AP2 is rev'ed, it will be interesting to see which B&O products will in turn be rev'ed to support it.  A developing story.

Barry Santini
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I cannot believe for a minute that 20 million songs have a recorded provenance beyond Redbook CD specifications.

Sure the songs may be delivered in a hi-res container. But the “candy” inside is still far less than the packaging suggests
Geoff Martin
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Barry Santini:
I cannot believe for a minute that 20 million songs have a recorded provenance beyond Redbook CD specifications.

Sure the songs may be delivered in a hi-res container. But the “candy” inside is still far less than the packaging suggests

 

Years ago, Apple started recommending that masters submitted to them for iTunes release should be at 96/24. They also recommended that studios not simply upsample to do this.

This was the document they released back then, in case you're interested. Check the section on "Best Practices"

https://www.apple.com/itunes/docs/apple-digital-masters.pdf

Back then, there was also some hype in the professional audio world because it was hoped that Apple would end the "loudness wars" since they were actively standardizing things like mastering levels for their own distribution.

So, since that time, studios that did record at higher sampling rates and bit depths have had the possibility of submitting materials at the original resolution to what we used to call iTunes. This means that Apple has been amassing a catalogue for years...

 

So, it's incorrect to automatically assume that the candy isn't what's advertised on the wrapper. However, it's also incorrect to assume that it is. There's nothing stopping a studio from upsampling (either using software or going through a DAC->ADC if they're old-fashioned) to arrive at a higher "resolution" - and no one would know the difference without some serious analysis tools and some intelligence behind the interpretation of the results.

 

On the other hand, most studios are recording at at least 96/24 or higher - and have been for years (remember that the CD Redbook format is about to turn 40). I was doing recording sessions 25 years ago where we were laying down the tracks at 96 kHz, but sending the 44.1 kHz masters to the label for CD release. (This is/was standard practice.) So the masters have been sitting out there, waiting for the distribution channels to catch up. The labels have the program material, the consumers have the equipment to play it back - now the pipes to connect the two are (finally) becoming available.

 

HOWEVER:

IF you use a streaming service (like Qobuz, for example)
and IF you use a player that displays the track's technical information (like Audirvana, for example)
THEN you'll see that some tracks are redbook (like Jennifer Warnes's Bird on a Wire, which is 44.1/16, for example) and some are higher resolution (like K.D. Lang's Bird on a Wire, which is 192/24, for example).

On the other hand

IF you use another streaming service (like Tidal, for example)
and IF you use the same player that displays the track's technical information (like Audirvana, for example)
THEN you'll see that some tracks are lower resolution (like The King's Singers's "Always a Woman" which is is 22.01/16-bit AAC, for example). Note that this is the Label's fault - not Tidal's - they just stream what they get.

So, one "Redbook" recording is being distributed as such. One "Redbook" recording is being distributed as a lower quality. And maybe the high res stuff could actually be a high res original...

 

And just to head things off at the pass... I'm not going to enter a debate about whether "High Resolution" means "Better".
This is a VERY complicated discussion that is rife with religious beliefs. However, "I can't hear above xx kHz" is not a reason to dismiss higher sampling rates and "I live in a noisy house" is not a reason to dismiss wider bit depths - just in case anyone was loading up their argument ammunition...

Cheers
-geoff

laseralex
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laseralex replied on Thu, May 20 2021 7:11 AM

Geoff Martin:
(remember that the CD Redbook format is about to turn 40)

I'd feel much better if we could all just pretend it's turning 20!

Sad

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Frederik
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Frederik replied on Thu, May 20 2021 8:15 AM

Geoff Martin:

And just to head things off at the pass... I'm not going to enter a debate about whether "High Resolution" means "Better".
This is a VERY complicated discussion that is rife with religious beliefs. However, "I can't hear above xx kHz" is not a reason to dismiss higher sampling rates and "I live in a noisy house" is not a reason to dismiss wider bit depths - just in case anyone was loading up their argument ammunition...

Hi Geoff,

I am sorry because you said you will not enter the debate about hi-res. However, I am very interested to hear your perspective on some elements.

First of all some background I am sure are very well aware of, but just for reference to put things in context:

- The sample rate determines the maximum frequency you can represent. A digital signal is a discrete (made up of samples) representation of a continues signal (waves). To reconstruct a sinus wave you need exactly two samples. This means that the maximum frequency you can reconstruct equals half the sample rate. This reconstruction is exact and not an approximation (for that specific frequency). In other words, with a sample rate of 44.1 we can accuratly reconstruct signals up to 22kHz (well above the limit of human hearring).

- The dynamic range determines the number of different volume levels you can represent. With 16bit you can represent a dynamic range of approximatly 90dB. Nevertheless, this is not an exact approximation, there are quantization artefacts in play.

In conclusion, there are arguments why there could be a perceptual difference with an increased dynamic range. For production it also makes sense to work with an increased sample rate to give addtional headroom to compensate for editing artefacts, transcoding etc. However, for playback I don't see the added value to increase the sample rate. I know that some speakers can reproduce higher frequencies (I think 90s and 50s can go over 40kHz?) but our brains will not pick up these signals anyway.

In short, I am just very interested to hear your perspective on this matter from a scientific (signal processing) point of view.

mbee
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mbee replied on Thu, May 20 2021 10:57 AM

laseralex:
I'd feel much better if we could all just pretend it's turning 20!

One thing is sure in audiophile territory: the more you have money available to spend on high end speakers, the less your ears are able to hear the difference, just because you are getting older...Stick out tongue

BeoJosh
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BeoJosh replied on Thu, May 20 2021 4:20 PM

In posting this announcement, I didn't mean to start a discussion as to whether Hi-Res is better or not, but simply to see how we might utilize this new format from Apple on our B&O systems for those who wish to.

I'm using Deezer Hi-Fi (FLAC) on my systems and have been quite happy with it (and, to my ears, it sounds better than Apple Music via AP, which is why I use it), but have been intrigued by the idea of Tidal Masters/QoBuz/Roon, etc. I haven't gone down that road because I want to keep my system as simple as possible, and I haven't been convinced it'd be worth the expense/hassle.

But with a pair of 50s on order that are capable of 24/192 and for my 28s on order, as well as my current 18s, all of which are capable of 24/96, I thought this development might make it easier to play Hi-Res should I choose to, since all the speakers will be connected to a BV with an Apple TV as a source.

The release says Apple TV can play Hi-Res natively, but there's no info about how the Apple TV outputs that to another system--ie whether it outputs via HDMI or whether some sort of DAC would be required. What's also unclear to me (and perhaps others here know) is whether the BV can output or pass along 24/192 to the 50s from the Apple TV, or whether I'd have to get another Apple TV and hook it up directly to the 50s to play Hi-Res Lossless.

I guess we'll have to wait and see!

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mbee
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mbee replied on Thu, May 20 2021 7:58 PM

The Apple TV seems like a nice solution to stream Apple Lossless but I’ve never experienced a nice audio quality on mine because it was fixed at 48kHz and my files are usually 44kHz. Maybe that has changed, or maybe there will be a lot of 48kHz files…

Sandyb
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Sandyb replied on Thu, May 20 2021 10:51 PM
I wonder if the Apple Music app (phone, tablet or ATV) will show the resolution of what is playing?

My guess is no, but It would be nice if they did as Qobuz and Roon do.

Not sure exactly how you currently listen to music / Deezer Hifi - i.e whether thats using speakers with native Deezer or whether you Airplay it.

That said, the Apple TV will grab the higher rate stream from Apple Music, and as long as your ATV is set to output uncompressed LPCM (which i think is the standard setting), you should be fine going through and out of a BV.

But i dont think the Apple Music app will tell you on screen information about the specific stream.

Geoff Martin
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Hi Frederik,

Regarding your sampling rate question: I'll write up a blog posting on my website to discuss this. It's too long to put here, and I need to make a bunch of graphs in Matlab first... However, this mistake that most people make is to assume that the only reason to have a higher sampling rate is to have a higher frequency bandwidth with some link to the limits of human hearing - that link is only one of many arguments for and against high sampling rates. It's the easiest one to explain and understand, but possibly the least relevant...

Regarding your bit depth statement: it's standard to use TPDF dither on LPCM signals, so there is no quantisation error on the signal. The quantisation error is randomised and turned into a program-independent noise floor at 6*nbits+3 dB below the maximum possible signal level. So, for example, in the case of 16-bit LPCM, the white noise from the dither is 93 dB below the level of a full-scale sine wave.

HOWEVER (as one example) if you have a 16-bit recording played through a 16-bit DAC to an analogue volume control set so that the sound pressure level of a full-scale sine wave is, say 50 dB SPL (which is a good guess of the level of the radio in the background as I type this on a Saturday morning while half of the house is still sleeping...) then the noise floor is 50 dB  - 93 dB = -43 dB SPL, which is much quieter than the noise of the fridge compressor...

HOWEVER, if I play a recording like the "Banditen-Gallopp" from Telarc's "Straussfest" cd, and I connect the digital output of the CD player to the digital input of a pair of Beolab 90s, and I turn the volume up to maximum, then the spike from the gun firing is going to hit a theoretical 122 dB SPL. This means that the noise floor of the 16-bit recording is 122 - 93 = 29 dB SPL, which is easily audible in the listening room. The 16-bit TPDF noise floor is the weakest link in this particular chain.

And yes, I play that track at that volume level often. It's an excellent demo of dynamic range, the spikes hit maximum - but they're so far above the RMS and they're so short in duration, that there's no harm done to anyone or anything.

cheers

-geoff

Geoff Martin
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laseralex:

Geoff Martin:
(remember that the CD Redbook format is about to turn 40)

I'd feel much better if we could all just pretend it's turning 20!

Sad

The first LP record was introduced in 1948.

The first CD was released in 1983 - 35 years later.

Now it's 2021 - 38 years later - and we think it's news when a streaming service announces that it can deliver CD quality.

Then again, cargo pants are back in fashion according to my son, so I shouldn't be surprised. Time to put away my 78s to make room for the cassette collection coming out of storage. It'll be interesting to hear Falco again after all these years... Rock me Amadeus...

Cheers

-geoff

Frederik
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Frederik replied on Sat, May 22 2021 2:08 PM

Hi Geoff,

Thank you very much for you response, I am looking forward to your blog post!

Also a word of appreciation for your blog in general, you provide some excellent material. I regularly refer my students to some of your articles.

All the best,
Frederik 

Frederik
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Frederik replied on Sat, May 22 2021 3:16 PM

Here is an interesting support article form Apple on lossless audio. However, I don't get why AirPlay is not even mentioned in this article. AirPlay already uses ALAC 16/44.1 for transmission, so in principle it should support lossless up to CD quality, but this support article doesn't say a worth about AirPlay and suggests that for playback on iOS or a Mac you need a wired connection. I guess we'll find out once the service is available.

chartz
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chartz replied on Sat, May 22 2021 4:43 PM
Hi,

Spotify has announced the same thing. I have compared lossless to 320 kbps on my freshly ‘acquired’ A9 and the difference is not marginal.

Jacques

Millemissen
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Does your screenshot indicate that you have listened to Spotify in lossless-16/44.1?

MM

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fredpert
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fredpert replied on Sat, May 22 2021 6:07 PM

Hi, does it mean that I would be able to appreciate a better sound quality playing Apple music through my ATV connected to my BV11 (via Airplay)?

Thanks

FREDPERT

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Sandyb
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Sandyb replied on Sat, May 22 2021 6:24 PM

The Apple Music app on the Apple TV gets the streams itself, and not via Airplay from your phone.

You can Airplay other stuff to it but if you are using the Apple Music app on your phone to play to the ATV, the ATV unit will get the stream itself.

i.e. its not playing an Airplay stream.

 

 

fredpert:

Hi, does it mean that I would be able to appreciate a better sound quality playing Apple music through my ATV connected to my BV11 (via Airplay)?

Thanks

 

chartz
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chartz replied on Sat, May 22 2021 7:01 PM

Millemissen:

Does your screenshot indicate that you have listened to Spotify in lossless-16/44.1?

MM

No, it was a glitch in the app where the hi-fi logo appeared. Clicking on it led to the menu you can see above.

It just announces that they are ready and that it shouldn’t be long till they make the official announcement!

 

Jacques

Millemissen
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chartz:

Millemissen:

Does your screenshot indicate that you have listened to Spotify in lossless-16/44.1?

MM

No, it was a glitch in the app where the hi-fi logo appeared. Clicking on it led to the menu you can see above.

It just announces that they are ready and that it shouldn’t be long till they make the official announcement!

Thanks - very nice.

As a Spotify Connect user I am looking forward to testing this out.

The lossless-16/44.1 would fit perfectly into the NL distribution.

MM

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Geoff Martin
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Frederik:

Hi Geoff,

Thank you very much for you response, I am looking forward to your blog post!

Also a word of appreciation for your blog in general, you provide some excellent material. I regularly refer my students to some of your articles.

All the best,
Frederik 

Hi Frederik,

Firstly, thanks for the kind words!

Don't expect the blog posting to come soon. It's no earlier than fourth in the list after 

  • an article explaining Jurin's Law and capillary action, and how it applies to fountain pen feed design
  • an explanation of variable reluctance pickups for the section on the MMC cartridge in the Beogram 4000c manual
  • a description of the straight line engine turning attachment I'm making for my wood lathe...

However, here's a quick outline for the "high sampling rate" series of issues-to-be-discussed (in no particular order...)

  • an explanation of the Nyquis / Shannon theorem, confined to the simplest case of an ADC -> DAC
    • including an intuitive example with a piano. Doubling the sampling rate is equivalent to adding one more octave on the top. There are as many "frequencies" in that top octave as there are in all of the other octaves below. That's logarithms for ya...
  • aliasing
  • an explanation of how any distortion in the signal processing creates aliasing "inside" the signal path
  • quantisation of poles and zeros in the Z-plane, resulting in inaccurate filter behaviour at low frequencies - a "victim" of the sampling rate and the bit depth of the filter coefficients
  • inaccuracies in filters' magnitude and phase responses above about Fs/4 (or Nyquist/2) as a result of the bilinear transform
  • possible effects on the noise floor caused by changes in sampling rate - particularly in systems with a Delta-Sigma conversion between the analogue and LPCM worlds
  • artefacts caused by poor (and sadly, ubiquitous) sampling rate convertors in the signal path
  • possible side effects in systems with frequency-domain processing
  • The basic stuff like bandwidth, block sizes, carbon-equivalent footprint of streaming data
  • The ease with which labels can cheat, delivering 44.1/16 recordings in larger container formats just to look bigger than reality
  • Warnings and pitfalls associated with doing A/B comparisons

There might be some more things to discuss that I'll think of when I get going on it. *However, as you can see there (and as I mentioned earlier in the thread) "I can't hear above xx kHz" is just one portion of that first point in a rather long list of issues to consider...

But first: capillary action!

Cheers
-geoff

Puncher
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Puncher replied on Mon, May 24 2021 2:40 PM

Huh? - who knew caterpillars could design fountain pens!!

Ban boring signatures!

Geoff Martin
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Of course! Caterpillars are very good fountain pen designers! You just have to make sure they get all the work done before they start cocooning...

AdamS
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AdamS replied on Tue, May 25 2021 1:30 PM

It's threads like this that make me glad my main listening source is vinyl...

Wink

Puncher
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Puncher replied on Tue, May 25 2021 2:43 PM

Did you know that hairy caterpillars are rendered deaf by the noise they make when crawling over a vinyl recording? Strange but true!Whistle

Ban boring signatures!

Geoff Martin
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On the plus side, they make excellent substitutes as record cleaner!

Just in case there are any hard-core audiophiles out there... this is a joke. Do not harvest hairy caterpillars for cleaning your vinyl... It will not make the sound less "anemic", nor will it add a "sense of dimensionality" hitherto unheard-of in this time-space continuum.

Cheers
-geoff

Puncher
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Puncher replied on Tue, May 25 2021 10:05 PM

Indeed, and it should also be pointed out, in the interest of safety, that attempting to clean vinyl using the hairy caterpillar method should absolutely not be attempted if wearing nylon undergarments as the resultant spark could be life threatening (to the caterpillar, at the very least).

Ban boring signatures!

AdamS
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AdamS replied on Wed, May 26 2021 12:55 PM

Geoff Martin:

On the plus side, they make excellent substitutes as record cleaner!

Just in case there are any hard-core audiophiles out there... this is a joke. Do not harvest hairy caterpillars for cleaning your vinyl... It will not make the sound less "anemic", nor will it add a "sense of dimensionality" hitherto unheard-of in this time-space continuum.

Cheers
-geoff

Yesterday's technology, I'm afraid, Geoff

I'm now using a trained flock of millipedes wearing special slippers for record cleaning. My blacks have never been so inky...

chartz
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chartz replied on Wed, May 26 2021 6:17 PM

Ha ha! Whatever those inky blacks mean anyway Big Smile

 

Jacques

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