English Deutsch Français Italiano Español Português 繁體中文 Bahasa Indonesia Tiếng Việt ภาษาไทย
All categories

I want to know because if I can I would like to increase the quality of my music.

2007-07-14 04:41:04 · 7 answers · asked by alexander_irvine 2 in Computers & Internet Software

7 answers

Simply re-do the MP3 from the CD at the higher bitrate. You won't get any improvement in music quality just changing a file from 128kbps to 320.

Garbage in garbage out.

2007-07-14 04:45:15 · answer #1 · answered by godron_wookie 4 · 0 0

Exactly right, increasing the bit rate will not improve the sound. Reducing a file from 320 to 128 will cut the file size by half and only people with above average hearing (about 1 in 1000) and people who try to impress you (about 900 in a 1000) will notice the difference. 128kbs is considered CD quality. Anything above is just a waste of time. I resample all my music to 128kb.

2007-07-14 04:49:48 · answer #2 · answered by John K 6 · 0 0

You can't create quality from a low quality file, for the most part.

There might be some type of "cleaning" you can do to the files to remove pops and such, but you can't increase the bit rate.

Can you turn a DVD copy of a movie into an HD-DVD copy of a movie? No. You can stretch the screen to make it look like it fits the screen, but you can't improve the quality of it.

2007-07-14 04:47:11 · answer #3 · answered by EEJ 5 · 0 0

you could do that but it would be a pointless excercize.
You would end up with a bigger file of the same quality, possibly even inferior quality.

Basically, once the quality is lost you cannot do anything. You cannot magically ADD quality as it was discarded when the MP3 was encoded from a .wav file to an MP3.

like he said, if you have the original then you are ok.

2007-07-14 04:46:09 · answer #4 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

I could say that until you might have fantastic puppy listening to, you would not also be in a position to inform the change until the exceptional is fantastic fantastic SH***TY... I have downloaded song for years, and I surely have heard truly official CD's. The common house Computer now a days has the processing energy and technological know-how to practically reproduction the cd precisely the way it could be copied in a manufacturing facility.

2016-09-05 09:32:56 · answer #5 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

The bit rate is simply whatever it was originally recorded at- that can't be changed. In order to get 320kbps you'd have to re-record at the higher bitrate.

2007-07-14 04:48:59 · answer #6 · answered by Proto 7 · 0 0

try downloading this software
http://www.blazemp.com/mp3_converter_software.htm

2007-07-14 04:48:19 · answer #7 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

fedest.com, questions and answers