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[Music] Music Streaming Services...Which one do you use?



Juan Albion

Chicken Sniffer 3rd Class
Spotify Premium. But last year I also took a 1-year subscription to Tidal Hi-Fi and absolutely loved the albums they'd taken directly from the master tapes. In the end, though, I decided I only needed one and Audials went through a period of not being able to rip Tidal in lossless so I went with Spotify.
 




1066familyman

Radio User
Jan 15, 2008
15,233
Spotify Premium. But last year I also took a 1-year subscription to Tidal Hi-Fi and absolutely loved the albums they'd taken directly from the master tapes. In the end, though, I decided I only needed one and Audials went through a period of not being able to rip Tidal in lossless so I went with Spotify.

I'd never heard of Audials, so just had a read up. Sounds quite interesting.
 


Official Old Man

Uckfield Seagull
Aug 27, 2011
9,095
Brighton
In the office I have Spotify free but also my turntable and vinyl now.
On Alexa I've Amazon Prime music plus my Daughters Spotify account. I have a Soundcore boost bluetooth speaker I take outside that pumps the music nicely. Do listen to Caroline a lot so I'll add Tune-In to the list. I've three speakers and 'play everywhere' fills the house.
Don't understand this Amazon HD when I'm only putting it through Alexa.
 




Normal Rob

Well-known member
Jul 8, 2003
5,795
Somerset
Spotify Premium/Family. Have 4 users currently on it, all with separate accounts,. Will soon be 5 if my youngest daughter want to come on board at a similar age to my other 2. All linked in to my google home set-up. Great value for the price.
 




1066familyman

Radio User
Jan 15, 2008
15,233
In the office I have Spotify free but also my turntable and vinyl now.
On Alexa I've Amazon Prime music plus my Daughters Spotify account. I have a Soundcore boost bluetooth speaker I take outside that pumps the music nicely. Do listen to Caroline a lot so I'll add Tune-In to the list. I've three speakers and 'play everywhere' fills the house.
Don't understand this Amazon HD when I'm only putting it through Alexa.

There is no point to Amazon HD over something like that bugging device, as you say. In fact, can't really see much point going beyond 320 mp3 on any bluetooth or wireless speaker set up. Another reason why Spotify has proved so popular I expect. I know blue tooth standards have come on at quite a pace in recent times, but still not likely to match wired set ups. Same with headphones really when it comes to wired vs wireless.
 




1066familyman

Radio User
Jan 15, 2008
15,233
Tidal Hifi is flac on some albums, so better quality than mp3.

On all their albums on the HiFi subscription I assume. Starting at cd quality 16 bit / 44.1khz , going right the way up to MQA. If you've got the gear to fully unfold the MQA's then that's the best quality files you can get, in theory, and only Tidal offer that. Qobuz goes right up to 24bit / 192khz though, which is marketed as 'hi res'. Deezer's flac files begin and end at 16bit / 44.1khz (cd quality), which is where I'm at, at my age :lol:

Spotify and Youtube doesn't go beyond mp3.
 




Is it PotG?

Thrifty non-licker
Feb 20, 2017
25,453
Sussex by the Sea
I have about 1/3 of my albums stored in 24/96 and 2/3 16/44.

Was a little wary until the software was sorted that didn't automatically downconvert the higher res to lower.

I'm hoping to get more of the 'better quality' albums in the higher res for future use, can always convert them to standard flac for phone use but you can't ski uphill.
 


1066familyman

Radio User
Jan 15, 2008
15,233
I have about 1/3 of my albums stored in 24/96 and 2/3 16/44.

Was a little wary until the software was sorted that didn't automatically downconvert the higher res to lower.

I'm hoping to get more of the 'better quality' albums in the higher res for future use, can always convert them to standard flac for phone use but you can't ski uphill.

Yep, good point about taking the higher quality so you can usually down sample, whereas once ripped in the 16 bit you can't upscale it to 24 bit. However, my Cowon DAP, for example, only supports up to 16 bit files, so I'd be screwed if I ripped everything in 24 bit. Also, the 24 bit's I have heard elsewhere, I could barely hear the difference to be honest.

Do you notice much difference in quality of 24 bit over 16 bit? Or say 24/192 over 24/96? I've read that with MQA'a on the right gear, there really is a nice quality difference. But I'm not sure I completely buy into this 'hi res' marketing of 24 bit over 16 bit.
 


Ludensian Gull

Well-known member
Apr 18, 2009
3,925
Mistley Essex
Is this thread now going over anybody else's head ??? Or is it just me that doesn't understand the last half dozen posts :lolol:
 




1066familyman

Radio User
Jan 15, 2008
15,233
Is this thread now going over anybody else's head ??? Or is it just me that doesn't understand the last half dozen posts :lolol:

Sorry, wandered off a bit on file quailty etc. But then for some sound quailty is a deciding factor in what streaming service they choose to go with.
 


Nitram

Well-known member
Jul 16, 2013
2,265
On all their albums on the HiFi subscription I assume. Starting at cd quality 16 bit / 44.1khz , going right the way up to MQA. If you've got the gear to fully unfold the MQA's then that's the best quality files you can get, in theory, and only Tidal offer that. Qobuz goes right up to 24bit / 192khz though, which is marketed as 'hi res'. Deezer's flac files begin and end at 16bit / 44.1khz (cd quality), which is where I'm at, at my age :lol:

Spotify and Youtube doesn't go beyond mp3.
Don’t really understand all this myself. Just checked on my Spotify and it gives you four options for music quality. Low (24k/bits) to Very High (320k/bits). So where does this fit in with the quality ratings?
 


1066familyman

Radio User
Jan 15, 2008
15,233
Don’t really understand all this myself. Just checked on my Spotify and it gives you four options for music quality. Low (24k/bits) to Very High (320k/bits). So where does this fit in with the quality ratings?

320kbps is the highest quality mp3 goes up to. I thought it went as low as 40 something, which is pretty terrible, but if they say 24kbps, then that's your lowest.

Mp3 compresses sound to reduce the file size. This is called lossy.

Uncompressed files are better in sound quailty and bigger in size. They are called lossless.
 




Nitram

Well-known member
Jul 16, 2013
2,265
320kbps is the highest quality mp3 goes up to. I thought it went as low as 40 something, which is pretty terrible, but if they say 24kbps, then that's your lowest.

Mp3 compresses sound to reduce the file size. This is called lossy.

Uncompressed files are better in sound quailty and bigger in size. They are called lossless.

Thanks for explaining this. I should try Tidal on my system. Although I did hear Tidal through a friends system, which he paid loads for, and to my ears (older) I didn’t think the sound was any better, than Spotify on mine. In fact I thought it was disappointing.

I still prefer to play vinyl through my main setup but occasionally stream Spotify, I’ll have to do a vinyl/stream comparison of a record I know well and hear the difference.
 


stingray

Active member
Jan 23, 2018
276
Don’t really understand all this myself. Just checked on my Spotify and it gives you four options for music quality. Low (24k/bits) to Very High (320k/bits). So where does this fit in with the quality ratings?

basic quality
 


Goldstone1976

We Got Calde in!!
Helpful Moderator
NSC Patron
Apr 30, 2013
14,124
Herts
Yep, good point about taking the higher quality so you can usually down sample, whereas once ripped in the 16 bit you can't upscale it to 24 bit. However, my Cowon DAP, for example, only supports up to 16 bit files, so I'd be screwed if I ripped everything in 24 bit. Also, the 24 bit's I have heard elsewhere, I could barely hear the difference to be honest.

Do you notice much difference in quality of 24 bit over 16 bit? Or say 24/192 over 24/96? I've read that with MQA'a on the right gear, there really is a nice quality difference. But I'm not sure I completely buy into this 'hi res' marketing of 24 bit over 16 bit.

I’ve said elsewhere (maybe even this thread??) that I can’t tell any difference between 24 and 16 bit, but I sure as hell can tell the difference between MQA and either 24 or 16. Just so much more detail - which some won’t like, but I do.
 


1066familyman

Radio User
Jan 15, 2008
15,233
Good news! Deezer have now permanently dropped their hifi tier subscription from £19.99 to £14.99 per month :thumbsup:

To be clear, their hifi tier means 16 bit / 44.1khz flac files. Cd quality in other words. Not 24 bit and above, which is otherwise labelled as 'hi res' by streaming services such as Tidal and Qobuz.
 




Nitram

Well-known member
Jul 16, 2013
2,265
Good news! Deezer have now permanently dropped their hifi tier subscription from £19.99 to £14.99 per month :thumbsup:

To be clear, their hifi tier means 16 bit / 44.1khz flac files. Cd quality in other words. Not 24 bit and above, which is otherwise labelled as 'hi res' by streaming services such as Tidal and Qobuz.

Am I right in understanding you would have do to this by a desktop rather than a mobile/iPad to get the high tier?
 


1066familyman

Radio User
Jan 15, 2008
15,233
Am I right in understanding you would have do to this by a desktop rather than a mobile/iPad to get the high tier?

No, same flac files available via mobile on Deezer now too.
 


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