It’s the small details that make your music come alive — the sizzle of brushes on a cymbal; the sound of fingers gently gliding along guitar strings; a quick intake of breath before the singer starts. Want to hear all those hair-raising details? Give hi-res audio a try.
Hi-res audio files sound better than CDs. And they sound way better than the compressed digital audio files we get from Spotify, Deezer, Amazon, and most music streaming services. They come much closer to capturing all the nuances of the original performance.
What is high-res audio?
High-res audio formats give you excellent sound quality and the convenience of digital audio files. High-res music files are larger than low-res music files. That’s because they retain almost all the audio information from the original recording. As a result, they take up more space on your hard drive and require more bandwidth for streaming.
Does high-res music sound better?
It depends. Digital audio, like digital images, consists of files of encoded bits of data. And for both, the more data the files contain, the more details of the original are retained. Low-resolution photos can appear murky, especially when they’re blown up. High-resolution photos generally reveal more details when you zoom in. And they usually look clear and in focus in a variety of sizes.
The same is true of digital audio. Low-res audio files tend to sound fine played through inexpensive headphones, smartphone speakers, or small Bluetooth speakers. In these systems, high-res audio can sound a little better, but not dramatically so.
Playing digital audio through high-performance gear is equivalent to blowing up digital images. The more detail your equipment is capable of delivering, the more its absence is noticeable with low-res files. And the more details you can hear with high-res audio.