Surround Sound Music Optical Formats

picture of CDs

DVD

The Digital Versatile Disc (sometimes called Digital Video Disc) comes in 2 versions relevant for surround sound music: the regular Video DVD and the DVD Audio.

On DVDs you mostly find Live Concerts with either Dolby Digital or DTS encoded audio in stereo or surround.

DTS Dics

Between the DVD and the DVD Audio there was also the so called DTS Disc. Unlike DVD Audio, DTS discs don’t require a dedicated player. Most CD and DVD players can read DTS discs, the only requirement is a receiver capable of decoding the DTS stream.

DVD Audio

A DVD Audio (or short DVD-A) carries uncompressed audio up to a sample rate of 96kHz/24 bit in 5.1 surround or 192kHz/24 bit in stereo. Most DVD-As also contain a DVD Video part with either a Dolby Digital or DTS stream for backward compatibility with regular DVD players. While there is always a menu on a DVD-A to navigate through the contents, some default to the surround tracks and can be started without a TV or screen.

Before the introduction of HDMI as a single digital connection for hi-definition audio and video, the only way to listen to the lossless surround tracks was by using 6 analog cables to the receiver. Toslink and optical connections usually used with DVD players can only transport stereo or lossy Dolby Digital/DTS 5.1 streams.

SACD

The Super Audio CD (or short SACD) is a music only disc. Unlike the digital audio found on CDs and DVD-As called PCM, SACD uses Direct Stream Digital (short DSD). Some people prefer DSD over PCM and vice versa, in the end it’s a matter of taste.

An SACD can have up to three layers: a CD layer with regular PCM stereo (for backward compatibility), a stereo DSD layer and a surround DSD layer up to 5.1.

Like DVD-A, SACD needed 6 analog cables connected to the receiver, before HDMI was introduced.

Blu-ray

With a capacity of up to 50 Gigabyte, a Blu-ray Disc (short BD) can hold multiple lossless surround sound formats and video, all playable by any current BD player.

PCM, Dolby TrueHD and DTS-HD Master Audio streams up to 5.1 with a sampling rate of 192kHz/24 bit or 7.1 with a sampling rate of 96kHz/24 bit are possible.

Pure Audio Blu-ray

A Pure Audio BD is basically like a regular BD, but the main difference is, that you can navigate through the disc without a TV or screen.

Surround Sound Music Audio Codecs

Terms explained

The Difference between lossless and lossy

There are two kinds of audio codecs:

  • lossy codecs like the widely known MP3
  • lossless codecs like FLAC

The main reason behind any audio compression is the reduction of file size. An uncompressed audio file found on a regular CD is about 10MB per minute in size; that’s more than 600MB for an hour. With 6 tracks (for 5.1 surround) instead of 2 that size triples. If the resolution is higher than 44.1kHz it takes up even more space on the disc. Before Blu-ray with it’s big capacity of up to 50 Gigabytes per disc, there was no way of fitting surround sound music on a disc without compression.

Lossy compression algorithms actually change the audio file, leaving out things apparently not important for the music or sound. This means, once it is compressed, there is no way of converting it back to it’s original state and there is always a loss of quality. Depending on the bitrate (bandwidth) and the codec used that quality loss can be negligible. Unless you strive for the highest quality possible, of course :-)

Lossless compression is comparable to zipping a file on a computer. It repacks the data to reduce the file size, but the corresponding decoder can unpack it back to the original audio stream. Nothing is lost during the process, hence the name lossless.

5.1, 7.1, 4.0 – Say what?

To describe the number of speakers in a surround setup, first the regular speakers are listed followed by a dot and the numbers of subwoofers. So 4.0 menas 4 speakers and no subwoofer, while 7.2 means 7 speakers and 2 subwoofers.

The most common setup is 5.1 consisting of 3 front speakers (left, center and right), 2 surround speakers (sometimes called satellites) and 1 subwoofer.

Many home theatres have 7.1 or 7.2 setups for movies, but for music 7.1 is still rare and often just an upmix of a 5.1 recording.

Sampling Rate / Bit Rate

Digital Audio is defined with 2 parameters: the sampling rate and the bit depth. Basically the bits represent the grid used to capture the amplitude (loudness) of a soundwave and the sampling rate defines the number of times a picture of the soundwave is taken. As a technical sidenote: the waveform, once it is converted back to analog, does NOT look like the digital picture that is taken during the analog digital conversion. The digital data gets modulated and filtered to get as close to the original as possible.

Picture explaining digital audio

In the graph above the red line represents the soundwave (a sine wave in this case), the vertical grid shows the number of bits and the horizontal grid stands for the sampling rate. The digital to analog converter (ideally) converts the digital data back to the red waveform.

CDs are encoded at 44.1kHz with 16 bits and for many there is no reason to increase this, as they believe there is no real benefit in it. In theory more bits and higher sampling rates are better (Blu-ray supports sampling rates up to 192kHz at 24 bits), but there is not many a topic as heavily discussed in online fora as this. I don’t want to go there now, but I’d like to quote sound engineer and founder of the label 2L Morten Lindberg and then leave it at that :-)

All Audio formats on The Nordic Sound are sample rate converted from the same DXD master. Comparing them in our studio we find only subtle differences from DXD down to 192kHz and 96kHz. The obvious degeneration is from 96kHz down to 48kHz. We find DSD, as used in the SACD format, somewhat different in colour from PCM; in some mysterious way DSD is softer and more beautiful but slightly less detailed. In DXD we find the shimmering brilliance from the original analogue source as directly from the microphones. Linear PCM is offered in addition to DTS-HD Master Audio on this Blu-ray with the purpose of convincing audiophiles of the true lossless qualities of commercial encoding. (…) I personally prefer extremely high resolution PCM over DSD and I would claim that DSD is not as transparent. But it all comes down to what the sound from your speakers can do to your body and mind. I find that the placement of microphones has an infinite more important role in the final experience of music, than the difference between HiRes PCM and DSD. Sometimes a lie can be more beautiful than the truth!

If you want to compare the different sampling rates and codecs yourself, I can highly recommend the Pure Audio Blu-ray The Nordic Sound, from which the above quote was taken. You can buy the disc here:

Codecs

Dolby Surround (not used for music)

Dolby Surround, developed by Dolby Laboratories, is mainly used for television broadcast. It’s a stereo file with information about the surround speakers ‘hidden’ in the audio (by means of phase shifting). These so called matrix encoded audio files can be played back on any stereo player, as the ‘hidden’ surround information is simply ignored. The LFE is handled by the playback device (anything below a certain frequency is routed to the subwoofer). A discrete channel distinction all around is not possible with this codec.

On the hardware side (DVD, Media or Blu-ray player) you often see the term Dolby Surround Pro Logic. This is a newer version used to decode the matrix encoded streams. In addition to a superior channel distinction Pro Logic also extracts a center channel. With newer Pro Logic II decoders, even an upsampling from stereo to surround or 5.1 to 7.1 is possible.

Dolby Digital (on DVD, DVD Audio and Blu-ray)

Dolby Digital or AC-3 is a lossy codec, allowing up to 6 discrete audio channels at a sampling rate of 48kHz to be encoded. There are different version of Dolby Digital, like Dolby Digital EX, which hides an additional back center channel in the signal by means of phase shift (same principle as Dolby Surround) for 6.1 or 7.1 output and Dolby Digital Plus with 8 discrete channels for true 7.1 and a higher bitrate (which results in better audio quality).

Dolby TrueHD (on Blu-ray)

Dolby TrueHD is a lossless codec found on many Blu-ray discs. It can carry up to 8 discrete channels (7.1) at 96kHz/24 bit and up to 6 channels (5.1) at 192kHz/24 bit.

DTS (on DVD, DVD Audio, DTS Disc and Blu-ray)

DTS is an alternative codec to Dolby Digital developed by DTS, Inc. formerly known as Digital Theater System. Just like Dolby Digital, DTS is a lossy codec capable of discrete 5.1 surround sound encoding, albeit at a higher bitrate, which is why film lovers preferred DVDs with DTS sound for their better audio quality. There are also different variants, like DTS-ES Matrix 6.1 (same principle as Dolby Digital EX) and DTS-96/24 for a higher sampling rate.

DTS-HD Master Audio (on Blu-ray)

DTS-HD MA is the lossless counterpart to Dolby TrueHD. It can also carry up to 8 discrete channels (7.1) at 96kHz/24 bit and up to 6 channels (5.1) at 192kHz/24 bit.

DSD MCH (on SACD)

Direct Stream Digital (short DSD) was developed by Sony and Philips for use with Super Audio CDs (short SACD). The DSD stream is stored as a sequence of 1 bit values at a sampling rate of 2.8224 Mhz, that’s 64 times the sampling rate of a CD. DSD has a dynamic range of 120dB and a theoretical frequency response up to 100kHz. However, the limit of human hearing and most recording equipment is at around 20kHz.

PCM (on Blu-ray)

Pulsce Code Modulation (short PCM) is uncompressed digital audio, found in stereo on every commercial CD, many concert DVDs and since the introduciotn of Blu-ray, also in surround.

FLAC (download)

Free Lossless Audio Codec (short FLAC) is an open source audio codec, that compresses the audio stream losslessly. A FLAC compatible player converts the file back to the original audio wave form, so no audio quality is lost and it is about half the size of the source file.

And surround? FLAC can handle up to 8 channels at very high sample rates (655350Hz/32 bit) and with it’s popularity growing in the audiophile sector (LINN, 2L among others) the future for FLAC does indeed look bright. On the forefront of innovation is (once again) the Norwegian label 2L. Many 2L surround sound recordings are available as multi channel FLACs, SACD and Pure Audio Blu-ray.

Lord of the Rings – Complete Soundtrack in 5.1 Surround Sound

The Lord of the Rings needs no introduction. As part of ‘The Complete Recordings’ sets you get a DVD-Audio with Howard Shore’s grand score in 5.1 surround sound.

It’s a classic approach to surround sound, something I like to call enhanced stereo. You get the main sound from the left and right speaker, some support (and the occasional solo instrument) in the center and ambience in the surrounds. Despite this conservative approach the discs sound great and immerse the listener just like in a concert hall.

I actually spent a lot of money on part 3 ‘The Return of the King’, because I missed the release date and it was out of print fast. Fortunately they’re in print again and I can only recommend these sets to any LotR and surround sound fan.

Hopefully we can get ready for a similar release for the Hobbit films :-)

 

    

Pearl Jam Twenty Blu-ray – Short review

PJ20

INTRO

As someone who was growing up with bands like Pearl Jam, I just had to get the documentary Pearl Jam Twenty on Blu-ray. Some inside looks of a band I really liked combined with the prospect of hearing Pearl Jam songs in surround was all I needed to get my credit card out.

CONTENT AND MIX

You get 3 audio options on this disc:

  • PCM 48/24 stereo
  • PCM 48/24 5.1 (bonus material is stereo only)
  • Dolby Digital 5.1 (640kbps)

The film starts out with a sort of collage of different interview snippets and songs, and the viewer is already immersed, as the audio is wandering through all 5 speakers. Once the voice over comes in, we are presented with a classic film mix, with the voice coming out of the center, ambience all around and the music typically from left and right with support from the surrounds.

The mix seems to work best with a cinema like speaker setup, where the surrounds are at the side of the listener. But that’s just personal preference.

Throughout the movie songs are fading in and out that are mixed in surround. Of course the music sounds best when it doesn’t have to compete with the voice over and the interviews, especially the live songs give a convincing sense of space. So the only problem I have with this release is that Sony Music dropped the ball here with the opportunity to put some surround mixes on the Blu-ray disc as a bonus feature (like Warner did with the soundtrack to Inception). At least we are treated with an almost uninterrupted full live performance of ‘Alive’ as a fitting end to the film.

SURROUND SOUND MUSIC VERDICT

Bottom line, this may not be a surround sound music disc, but it is a great documentary by award-winning director and music journalist Cameron Crowe with 2 strong lossless tracks (stereo and surround). So for any fan of Pearl Jam, Pearl Jam Twenty on Blu-ray comes highly recommended. It’s an intimate behind the scene look of an iconic alternative rock band, solidly mixed in surround by Eric R. Fischer.

You can get it here:

ELP albums to be re-mixed by Steve Wilson in surround

According to different posts made by Steve Wilson (best known for his band Porcupine Tree) the first 6 albums by Emerson, Lake & Palmer will be re-mixed and re-issued as box sets, including 5.1 surround mixes by Steve Wilson.

According to Steve Wilson the box sets will include:

1: CD with original mix in most recent remastered form /
2: CD with new stereo mix of the album and unreleased pieces and alternate takes found on the tapes /
3: DVD with 5.1 mix and all the stereo material.

Blu-rays are unfortunately still incredibly expensive to author and manufacture – to include a BR with these sets I think you would be looking at at least double these prices, which naturally makes the record companies a bit cagey, especially with the currency of multiple disc box sets of classic albums having fallen so much over the last couple of years.

SW

There has still been no confirmation of lossless audio so far, so we could end up with lossy Dolby Digital tracks. Needless to say, I pre-ordered the first 2 sets anyway, if only to just support a 5.1 release of a major studio (Sony Music in this case).

Emerson, Lake & Palmer

Tarkus

Stay tuned for reviews as soon as the sets arrive!

Coming soon

Coming soon :-)

Inception Blu-ray – With 5.1 surround soundtrack

picture of the Hans Zimmer Soundtrack to the movie Inception

Intro

The name Hans Zimmer is tied to Hollywood blockbuster movies like not many others. Even though he came to fame as the keyboarder of the band The Buggles with their worldwide hit ‘Video Killed the Radio Star’, Zimmer is best known for his score writing and sound designing. His credits span from ‘The Lion King’ (for which he received an Oscar) over ‘The Rock’ to ‘Pirates of the Carribean’ and ‘The Dark Knight’.

Hans and I have at least one thing in common: we both love surround sound music.

I don’t even know why anybody would want to get out of bed and make a stereo recording. There’s a thing that happens, when you can be inside the music, which is really what surround does, that is so much nicer.

Thanks to this dedication to surround sound we can now hear 10 tracks of his great score on the bonus Blu-ray disc of the Inception 2 disc edition in marvellous 5.1 surround sound.

Since this  is part of a Bu-ray movie and not a Pure Audio Blu-ray disc, you need a screen of some sort to navigate to the music.

Content

The first three tracks ‘We Built Our Own World’, Dream Is Collapsing’ and ‘Radical Notions’ are stylistically connected and play like an orchestral end credits suite, followed by the atmospheric ‘Old Souls’ and ’528491′ ending with those ship horn like unisono notes also heard on the trailer for the movie Inception.

Around 2.03 you can hear those notes. It sounds way more impressive on the Blu-ray disc!

Next up is ‘Mombasa’, a very pumped-up rhythm driven track that will get your feet tapping.  ‘One Simple Idea’ and ‘Dream Within A Dream’ bring the listener back to the original mood and ‘Paradox’ and ‘Time’, 2 beautiful orchestral pieces end the thrill ride.

Even though the term epic has been used to death lately (mostly due to the annoying misnomer ‘epic fail’), when Zimmer’s score shifts into full gear, epic and grand are two fitting terms.

It seems, there are two sorts of listeners when it comes to Hans Zimmer: those who love his music and those who look down on it, saying it’s too simplistic and commercial, when compared to classical compositions. I don’t completely disagree with the second group, when you are in fact comparing the music alone to classical works. But this comparison is missing a key factor: the movie that goes with it!

Hans Zimmer is a score writer, his task is to support the moods and emotions of the pictures moving on the big screen. As such he relied strongly on his sound designing skills for this score and to me, he capured the essence of the movie Inception brilliantly.

Listening to the surround mix of this soundtrack not only brings back images of the movie, it is an experience all by itself. All parts, the composition, the orchestration, the sound design, and yes, the contribution of guitar player Johnny Marr and undoubtedly many other people, make for a final product that is far from simplistic in nature. Quite the contrary, it manages to span very complex emotions and unite them in something that is best enjoyed front to back.

The Mix

First off, the mix on the Inception soundtrack in surround is very dynamic. On my personal reference listening level it starts out with a very modest volume, but the loud parts are ground shaking. Just the way I like it :-)

The main part of the music is happening in the fronts with the center as support and occasionally featuring the synth bass lines. The surrounds are lower in level than the fronts, but are much more than just ambience parts. The mix front to back is very well balanced and especially during the louder brass heavy parts, the feeling of immersion is first class. The subwoofer gets quite a workout as well and supports the impression of size impressively.

Surround Sound Music Verdict

If you’re a fan of Hans Zimmer scores, you have to get this Blu-ray, not least for the excellent movie that comes with it. And if you don’t know him or don’t particularly like his music, you have to get it anyway! The pure fun of experiencing a well done surround mix dynamically covering soft to skyscraper huge is worth the price of admission alone. Plus you get one of the best movies of 2010 as a bonus. Highly recommended!

You can get the 2 disc edition of Inception here:

Surround Sound Music is dead, long live surround sound music!

Home-Cinema

Surround sound has been around for a while now and for music it has been declared dead by many people, like Steve Guttenberg for example on his blog entry on CNET.

I tend to agree with him on some of the points he gives for why surround sound for music has never caught on, but like some of the commenters, I think that surround done right is a listening experience stereo cannot give you. Ever.

But let’s go back in time real quick. In 1940 Disney’s animated movie Fantasia could be seen and heard in cinemas with Fantasound, a stereophonic sound system developed by the engineers of the Walt Disney Studios. It was the first commercial motion picture with sound that had directionality and movement, something only possible with multiple (at least 2) speakers. Since then we’ve grown used to bullets and helicopters seemingly flying by our heads and cars going from left to right when we watch a movie, wether it be at home or at the local cineplex. Surround sound is just a part of the movie experience we’ve come to expect. But what about music?

Even though Progrock Band Pink Floyd were already performing a surround sound concert back in 1967 using a custom quad system, quadraphonic sound never really caught on to the masses. It was only with the rise of the home cinemas that multi channel audio found it’s way into the living rooms, this time in digital form via Laserdisc and later DVD. The circumstances were good for the introduction of a format for surround sound music. Unfortunately there were more than one. With ‘DVD Audio’ and ‘SACD’ the consumers were confronted with two competing and non compatible formats that required a dedicated player and analog audio connections for each; that’s two times six in the case of 5.1. Since not everything was available for both systems, the surround sound audiophile had to either get 2 players, with double the audio connections, or miss out on some releases. The regular consumer couldn’t be bothered and as a result of this format war surround sound music has remained a niche product.

Wait a minute, didn’t surround sound music die because no one really needs it, everybody is listening to music on a portable device and no one sits down to listen to music anymore? I don’t think that’s true. Sure, a lot of music is consumed on the go, but I know many people who still like to relax while listening to music, either sitting down or walking around doing something else. So one might say, people who listen to music on stereo systems while cooking or cleaning wasted money on a second speaker, because a single mono speaker would suffice, right? I respectfully disagree. You might not always use it to it’s full potential, but it is there for you when you have the time to sit down and enjoy the complete experience, and if you already have a surround setup, why not use it for music, too?

I am convinced that once you hear good surround sound music you can appreciate it as an artform all by itself.

And I firmly believe, if there was more contemporary content in surround, now could be the time for a renaissance. With Blu-ray Audio we finally have a Hi-Resolution multi channel optical disc format that can be played back by any regular Blu-ray player. HDMI allows the audio to be transported with just one cable from the player to the receiver and the number of streaming devices capable of playing back surround sound files is growing steadily. Surround sound has become easy and the installation is already there for the movies. With labels like 2L, who support both physical distribution on Blu-ray Audio (and SACD) and digital distribution with multi channel FLAC files, we already have pioneers of the new era. Others need to follow, because for the masses surround sound music is dead. Long live surround sound music!

Pinky Floyd Immersion Box Sets with surround mixes

Picture of Pink Floyd Band Members

If there is one band that is predestined to release it’s music in surround sound, it has to be Pink Floyd. They were experimenting with surround early on and even performed a concert in 1967 using a custom quad system.

The album The Dark Side of the Moon has been available in surround for a while now, both as SACD mixed by James Guthrie in 5.1 and as unofficial bootleg DVD Audio with the original Alan Parson’s quad mix.

With the release of the Wish You Were Here Immersion box set, following the fantastic Immersion box set of The Dark Side Of The Moon, there are now 2 official surround sound music releases by Pink Floyd. Unfortunately the preview for the content of the Immersion box set for The Wall shows no surround mix. Whatever the reason is behind this, what a great missed opportunity! But at least we got DSotM and WYWH, so I won’t complain, especially since they are great surround mixes.

Full review will follow.

You can get the Pink Floyd Immersion box sets here:

Facebook and Twitter

Time’s flying by right now, but I finally managed to set-up the connection to facebook and twitter.

If everything works as it should, this post should trigger a tweet and a post to the facebook page.

Stay tuned!