

OK guys, your additional questions are quite fair. If on the contrary you hear audio lossy compression artifacts, that is less clarity specially in the low and high frequencies or a kind of phaser effect in the sibilant sounds (cymbals or some vocals), you may try to use higher bitrates, such as 256 kbp/s or even higher.
#Coffee is for closers wav file Pc#
Did you try to listen to the same MP3 file reproducing it with your PC comparing MediaPlayer and Mixcraft for example? Maybe when you listen through WindowsMediaPlayer your PC is adding that effect that you should disable somewhere.

So, if you hear dynamic range compression, it isn't because of the MP3 encoding, but it is due to the audio equipment that for some reason adds that effect. That's because MP3 works not by reducing dynamic range or frequency response, but by discarding data that's less likely to be heard. In the MP3 encoding, the frequency response and dynamic range are essentially unchanged, there's just more junk in the signal. I don't understand if you mean audio lossy compression (artifacts) or dynamic range compression.
#Coffee is for closers wav file windows#
On computer speakers, windows media player, way over the top compressed. Wondering if that all adds up to too much?.

And most of my tunes have alot of acoustic tracks. Generally, I don't use much compression,and none on mastering although on tracks with acoustic guitars there is some. MikeDVI wrote:When I mix down demos to email out as mp3, on "some" of my playback devices they sound overly compressed, on others they are not too bad.
