moDernisT by Ryan Maguire published on 2014-02-18T19:06:33Z "moDernisT" was created by salvaging the sounds lost to mp3 compression from the song "Tom's Diner", famously used as one of the main controls in the listening tests to develop the MP3 encoding algorithm. Here we find the form of the song intact, but the details are just remnants of the original, scrambled artifacts hinting at what once was. download uncompressed audio: http://rpm7.bandcamp.com/album/the-ghost-in-the-mp3 The MPEG-1 or MPEG-2 Layer III standard, more commonly referred to as MP3, has become a nearly ubiquitous digital audio file format. First published in 1993, this codec implements a lossy compression algorithm based on a perceptual model of human hearing. Listening tests, primarily designed by and for western-european men, and using the music they liked, were used to refine the encoder. These tests determined which sounds were perceptually important and which could be erased or altered, ostensibly without being noticed. What are these lost sounds? Are they sounds which human ears can not hear in their original contexts due to our perceptual limitations, or are they simply encoding detritus? It is commonly accepted that MP3's create audible artifacts such as pre-echo, but what does the music which this codec deletes sound like? In the work presented here, techniques are considered and developed to recover these lost sounds, the ghosts in the MP3, and reformulate these sounds as art. http://ryanmaguiremusic.com/theghostinthemp3.html Genre losscore Comment by Jack Oliver-Sherry If you are reading this are you able to develop software that can do this (I am on Mac but you can do both Windows and Mac) 2020-06-23T19:53:40Z Comment by Queen Paramount thisisfascinating 2020-04-09T22:11:56Z Comment by FoxMind fuck yeah I been looking to find this again for years! 2020-03-20T10:10:24Z Comment by Stingray Simone this is amazing 2020-03-13T23:51:04Z Comment by HellRemix Official which version of the song did you use (dna remix, acapella, or the other one from the album) 2018-04-26T12:06:08Z Comment by Ezrazmus @wtfbomb153: take a lossless file, make an MP3 of it which reduces it by 80% or more. compare the two files against each other, find a way to extrapolate out the sound that is different between the two, and you have an approximation of what is "lost" or thrown away in the perception model of audio data loss 2015-08-18T18:12:41Z Comment by Ezrazmus @withoutanywords: FLAC 2015-08-18T18:11:12Z Comment by twinsouls this is GORGEOUS 2015-08-13T05:10:24Z Comment by Thiago Granato 1 great! 2015-07-13T14:09:25Z Comment by ionisy this is actually incredible ambient noise. 2015-06-08T23:24:53Z Comment by Saint Brown bless you... 2015-05-20T02:50:35Z Comment by INOKES Music very interesting, i'll use this sound 2015-02-24T15:27:15Z Comment by ChrisFitzhenry1983 wow Ryan....i knew MP3's were compressed, and that you lose a ton of quality - but, when i saw this video on your site, i had to come here! That is so freaky....scared the cat LOL. I have to use MP3 to podcast with, but, when it comes to my personal collection...it's Lossless. Mainly FLAC, but, i do have APE files as well. But, NOTHING we do digitally - can really replace the "Old way" - from Vinyl to cassette to CD. I don't think one format is better than the other now....especially now. Things have advanced from the old vinyl and 8 tracks i grew up on (No CD's til 95 or 96, was born in 83 LOL) - But, i've seen the age of everything...and...wow. 2015-02-24T09:38:49Z Comment by Raymond M very like mighty add...thanks! 2015-02-23T08:15:25Z Comment by Tonomous So what happens if you create an MP3 of this? 2015-02-20T14:59:55Z Comment by Simone Del Villano Funny thing: SC transcoded the track again. So in theory it should have lost more data. You don't mention what encoder it was used and what the switches were. 2015-02-19T23:18:20Z Comment by Ezrazmus This should help people to understand that listening to music is about a lot more than frequency response and recognition. This shows how much spatial sound, timing and space cues, and otherwise human emotion is stripped during the mp3 compression. 2015-02-18T13:50:27Z Comment by derekcfpegritz I'll be sampling this for one of the tracks on my next album. :) It'll be subtly mixed in though as a tongue-in-cheek reference since the track I'm working in is already called "Modernism." 2015-02-17T15:09:17Z Comment by 𝘉𝘙𝘐𝘋𝘌 Would be worth sampling 2015-02-17T06:01:32Z Comment by Tarrou what bitrate did you use for the mp3 compression? would that stuff also appear with a 320 mp3? 2015-02-17T02:23:56Z Comment by birdsnest ꙰ ҉ Fascinating study! This sound is haunting but beautiful. 2014-08-19T22:48:27Z Comment by Dave Brown 13 haunting 2014-07-21T16:00:09Z Comment by antisketches wish i could download this and listen to the uncompressed version. Kind of defeats the purpose listening to this project as a low quality soundcloud stream ;) Very very nice work nonetheless! 2014-07-16T16:15:24Z Comment by ontologist Love your interpretation here… way more soothing than I would have guessed 2014-07-07T07:52:21Z Comment by Uber Steiner This is stunningly powerful !! 2014-07-05T17:41:26Z Comment by gentil We'd love to play moDernisT on our radio show, is there any way we can get the track in a lossless format? Cheers! 2014-06-30T05:57:43Z Comment by Future Garage Community This is freaky! Like listening to the dead trying to reach out through digital music. 2014-06-29T17:59:17Z Comment by brainslug Perfect for a modern art installation! 2014-06-28T15:07:49Z Comment by :¬l Great stuff. Reading your paper on the process now. 2014-03-25T22:36:16Z