High-res Downloads of Orchestral music available


This is a first for the internet. 24-bit/96kHz remastered tape files available for downloading. This music is a MUST download. Some of these tracks are famous performances that are highly sought after. If you have an Off-Ramp Turbo or Turbo2, Off-Ramp I2S or a Transporter, you can play these native 24-bit/96kHz files. They are encoded in FLAC.

The first samples (exerpts) are being offered for download are FREE at this URL:

http://www.highdeftapetransfers.com/index.asp?PageAction=VIEWCATS&Category=14

Enjoy!

Steve N.
Empirical Audio
(not affiliated with highdeftapetransfers.com)
audioengr
This is promising. The future of music will be downloads and likely computer (or at least hard drive) based.

We may finally get the digital quality we've all been dreaming about, this while Sony and Phillips are still messing around, trying to patent another "silver" disc that will promise quality and not deliver.

Good news as far as I'm concerned. I hope it's a success.
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TVAD - you must convert it to 16/44.1 first and then you can write a playable disk. There are a number of tools you can buy, but this one is free:
http://www.voxengo.com/downloads/?highlight=r8brain

Here is another:
http://www.adobe.com/products/audition/

The site also sells the playable disks.

Steve N.
Empirical Audio
Manufacturer
alternative, there is free software available to create and burn DVD-Audio disc of 24/96 material...
you can download "DVD-Audiofile" from this website:
http://24bit.turtleside.com/
DVD-Audiofile is just a windows frontend for this open source project: http://dvd-audio.sourceforge.net/

DVD-Audiofile creates a disc image (i.e. you get an .ISO file), which you can then burn onto standard DVD+/-R media with Nero, ImgBurn, or whatever other program.

I do this all the time with live recordings and 24 bit material.

I suspect most people here have DVD players that are capable of playing back DVD-Audio discs. however, if you don't, there is also free software available that will take 24 bit files and create a DVD-Video disc, with just a blank screen for the video.