0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic. Read 6410 times.
Of course some sort of digital magic may have made the tape hiss disappear,in which case ignore my comments about it.40kHz content at -120dB could be noise that got digitized,I kind of doubt that it is related to musical content in the file.Scotty
"Pop" and rock recordings of the late '60's, however, frequently involved multiple analog tape generations on multi-track recorders, which had poorer frequency response to begin with and much poorer after a few generations.
My spectrum plot looks different, isn't brickwalled, and has substantial material above 20K. It may depend on what part of the track you sample.
Interestingly, the main difference between your graph and mine is that your plot goes all the way down to -126 dB, while mine stops at -90dB. (How do you get Audacity to generate that window? I can't figure out how to get it below -90.) I notice that, if you cut your graph of at -90, it looks virtually identical to mine. What it all signifies, I can't tell, except that I'd question the notion of "substantial material above 20K," if all said material appears to be at -94 dB or softer.