and if u burn your tracks at lower speeds, they will actually sound
better..i didn't believe it myself until my friend proved it to me..this
probably won't affect drum'n bass music much (we even burn mp3s and get
'satisfying' results) but the difference is there when in comes to vocal
music such as accapella..for instance my friend made two copies of Sarah
Brightman's CD - one burned at 2� speed and the other at 12� speed..and i'm
telling you, if your ear is trained enough, u can hear that the �ess� sounds
on a CDr recorded at 12� have started to hiss more than on the copy burned
at lower speed..well, the difference isn't that perceptible but if to pay a
little more attention while listening with a really good set of
speakers/monitors or headphones then u really can hear it..thought i'd let u
all coming quality freaks know ;)

ez
::z::

>
>as long as you burn al low speeds, any type of blank CD plays
>nicely I've noticed
>
>------------------------
>On 6 Mar 2002 at 10:57, Nick Lankester wrote:
>
>> Your burning software will give you the option of burning either
>a data cd or an audio
>> cd... As far as I know, an audio CD track is just a wav file
>that's been encoded slightly
>> differently..
>>
>> Also, as long as you buy decent quality CD blanks they should
>even play in old skool cd
>> players..
>>
>> Nick
>>
>
>---
>ICQ #: 3362938
>
>"progress doesn't come from early risers,
> progress is made by lazy men looking for easier ways to do things"
>
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