Page 1 of 2
Pirates of The Caribbean Soundtrack problems ...
Posted: 2004-01-11 02:07pm
by Durandal
I just bought the soundtrack for Pirates of The Caribbean. It's no doubt excellent, but it has some issues in the recording, I think. Throughout the music, there are little "flecks," is the only way I can think of to describe them. They're subtle, but I catch them every time, and they repeat consistently in the same places on different computers (I haven't tried playing it on a normal CD player yet). This is an original, store-bought disc that I just got yesterday, so it hasn't been scratched at all.
Does anyone else have the soundtrack to verify this? There are a lot of the little flecks in track 13. If you listen closely, you'll know what I'm talking about. I don't see the soundtrack listed anywhere as copy-protected or anything like that.
Posted: 2004-01-11 02:45pm
by Uraniun235
Hmm. I'm catching a few, too.
On the subject of the soundtrack, anyone else think it's another victim of "the loudness wars"?
Posted: 2004-01-11 03:18pm
by phongn
Watermark, maybe? I don't have the track to listen to here ...
Posted: 2004-01-11 03:46pm
by Durandal
Uraniun235 wrote:Hmm. I'm catching a few, too.
I'm seriously considering returning it to Best Buy for a refund. This CD is clearly defective. Average listeners may not notice, but those little flecks are distracting and degrade the listening experience.
Posted: 2004-01-11 04:10pm
by The Kernel
Have you tried ripping it to MP3's and then listening to the music? That would expose any sort of watermarking or copy protection instead of a damaged disc.
Also, some of the more exotic anti-piracy schemes simply do not work well in a PC CD-ROM. The music industry has no plans to fix this which leaves PC music listeners out in the cold.
Posted: 2004-01-11 04:27pm
by Durandal
Yes, I've ripped the tracks to AAC audio files with iTunes, and they have the same problems. This happens on my work machine, too, as well as the one Windows box I've tried. I'll try it in a bare bones CD player when I can. If it's an issue only with PC CD-ROM drives, then the product is clearly defective. If I can't play or rip a CD to my computer without problems, then it's useless to me.
EDIT: Also, trying to rip it with iTunes' error correction gave me the same results, as did trying to rip it with Nero's jitter correction.
Posted: 2004-01-11 04:54pm
by phongn
Find a PC with EAC and rip in Secure Mode and see if errors occur.
Posted: 2004-01-11 05:28pm
by Vertigo1
Or play it in a regular CD player. If it plays fine in a regular CD player, then its definitely copy protection.
Posted: 2004-01-11 10:37pm
by Drooling Iguana
Didn't they just re-use the Gladiator soundtrack with that movie? That's what it sounded like when I watched it, anyway.
Posted: 2004-01-11 10:42pm
by Uraniun235
No, not at all. Different composer, actually, although IIRC he studied under the composer for Gladiator.
Posted: 2004-01-11 10:43pm
by Durandal
Drooling Iguana wrote:Didn't they just re-use the Gladiator soundtrack with that movie? That's what it sounded like when I watched it, anyway.
It was over-produced by Hans Zimmer (whatever that means), but it's more piratey.
Posted: 2004-01-11 10:47pm
by phongn
Durandal wrote:Drooling Iguana wrote:Didn't they just re-use the Gladiator soundtrack with that movie? That's what it sounded like when I watched it, anyway.
It was over-produced by Hans Zimmer (whatever that means), but it's more piratey.
Over-producing usually means making it have a lot more bass, usually some sort of dynamic range compression, etc. Quite popular nowadays.
Posted: 2004-01-11 10:58pm
by aerius
Uraniun235 wrote:Hmm. I'm catching a few, too.
On the subject of the soundtrack, anyone else think it's another victim of "the loudness wars"?
I don't have the disc but from the sound discription that's what I'd guess. Sounds like someone in production set the volume up too high and clipped the peaks, or it could be from running it through a bad dynamic compressor and fucking up the peaks. If you have CoolEdit run the "Statistics" check on the wav file, if you see peaks right at the max & min sample values, clipped samples, or the difference between peak and mean sound level is <10dB I'd say something got fucked up when they were mixing & mastering the CD.
Posted: 2004-01-11 11:55pm
by Uraniun235
If it's fucked up, I'd bet it was done deliberately.
Posted: 2004-01-12 12:20am
by Durandal
Uraniun235 wrote:If it's fucked up, I'd bet it was done deliberately.
Agreed. I find it hard to believe that someone Disney would hire to master the soundtrack to the biggest movie of the Summer would be so incompetent and miss the clipping. I'll have to try and find a regular CD player to see if it's some sort of copy-protection bullshit.
EDIT: Just for fun, I downloaded an MP3 from the CD off of Kazaa. It has the same problems, so it's not just me.
Posted: 2004-01-12 12:35am
by Durandal
I've posted a sample clip from one of the more offending tracks from the album
here. You should be able to play it directly through your browser if you have QuickTime installed. If not, then you can download it and change the extension to .m4a to play it in WinAmp, I believe.
Posted: 2004-01-12 03:03pm
by aerius
Talk about compression & clipping artifacts. Some dumbass in production compressed the fuck out of it and set the level to max. I took a listen to it and instantly knew that's what they did, converting it to .wav with foobar2000 and then running the statistics check with Cooledit confirmed it. Check this out:
Clipped samples galore, a pathetic peak to average difference of under 4dB, and the sample values and peak RMS power are maxed out. In other words, some idiot wanted to make it as loud as they could and killed the sound quality in the process.
Posted: 2004-01-12 03:06pm
by Uraniun235
*sigh* Another victim of the
loudness race.
Posted: 2004-01-12 03:24pm
by phongn
Start bitching, post reviews on Amazon warning other purchasters and see if you can get a recall going. It clearly is a defective product.
(In another example, Universal re-issued the Jurassic Park DTS DVD, because the original version did not have an LFE track(!))
Posted: 2004-01-12 05:31pm
by Durandal
Well I E-mailed the guy over the LoudnessRace.Net and gave him the link to the sample, and I encouraged him to add it to his list. We'll see what he says. I've also posted a review to Amazon.com. Aerius, if you'd like an uncompressed sample, I can provide it.
Posted: 2004-01-12 05:36pm
by Stravo
Damn and I was going to get this soundtrack after seeing the movie last week. Is this becoming common now? I don;t think I've run across this on any of the soundtracks I have.
Posted: 2004-01-12 05:59pm
by Durandal
Stravo wrote:Damn and I was going to get this soundtrack after seeing the movie last week. Is this becoming common now? I don;t think I've run across this on any of the soundtracks I have.
This is the first soundtrack I've had audible distortion problems with, but the problems of reduced dynamic range are quite common. If you look at a level meter while playing a CD, a lot of the tracks will keep the level in the red, and the only time it leaves that level is when the track stops playing. It's sad, really.
Posted: 2004-01-12 06:28pm
by Rogue 9
Hmm. Took me a couple listens to hear what you were talking about in that sample, but its there all right. Perhaps the subwoofer was covering it. *Lowers the bass level.*
Posted: 2004-01-12 06:36pm
by Durandal
Rogue 9 wrote:Hmm. Took me a couple listens to hear what you were talking about in that sample, but its there all right. Perhaps the subwoofer was covering it. *Lowers the bass level.*
Try listening with a decent set of headphones.
Posted: 2004-01-12 06:43pm
by Rogue 9
Right. My sound system is kickass, mmkay?
Comes of being a bass player. Need to hear the bass lines in stuff. If you insist, I'll try hooking up the ol' Bose radio to the computer now. But I already heard what you're talking about.