I was going to tag this on to one of my other threads but decided to start a new one just concentrating on what we hear and feel.
Later I'll be posting files of the same hi-rez music, just at different sample-rate/bit-depths and showing what you should listen for.
Before I do that though, I just watched an excellent video of Evelyn Glennie. For those of you that don't know of her, she is a deaf musician. For years I've been telling people to also listen with your body. You do it now at the theatre when a dinosaur stomps at 12Hz. You can't hear it, but you can feel it. The same principle applies to tones > 18k
Take a look/listen to the video. You'll never listen to sound the same.
[video]http://www.ted.com/talks/lang/eng/evelyn_glennie_shows_how_to_listen.html[/video]
Later I'll be posting files of the same hi-rez music, just at different sample-rate/bit-depths and showing what you should listen for.
Before I do that though, I just watched an excellent video of Evelyn Glennie. For those of you that don't know of her, she is a deaf musician. For years I've been telling people to also listen with your body. You do it now at the theatre when a dinosaur stomps at 12Hz. You can't hear it, but you can feel it. The same principle applies to tones > 18k
Take a look/listen to the video. You'll never listen to sound the same.
[video]http://www.ted.com/talks/lang/eng/evelyn_glennie_shows_how_to_listen.html[/video]