@seventies I've been a recording engineer for nearly 3 decades. I can tell you what I know based on having worked in some of the biggest name studios in the industry.
I've never seen anyone use DXD. Though I do know that Channel Classics is one studio that intended to but actually work in DSD https://www.channelclassics.com/general-info/about-channel-classics/ They are in any case an outlier.
The standard in the industry these days is quickly becoming 24Bit/96K where as it's been 44.1K for music production and 48K for movie / TV audio production for the last 20+ years. It's common practice for mastering engineers to upsample to 96K and work there before converting to whatever res and format their customer desires.
If the intention is to release a 'high res' remastered recording the most common practice is to upsample material recorded at 44.1K or 48K to 96K and mix / remaster there and output at 96K. The delivery container for that could be PCM, DSD, MQA or converted back to analog for vinyl.
Nyquist’s Theorem states that we only need 44.1K to capture the highest frequencies for the human ear. While that's true it hasn't prevented exploration into the higher sampling rates. The question is whether the differences that can be heard there are natural or byproducts, namely distortion.
I'm not sure I've answered your question but I hope this helps.
I've never seen anyone use DXD. Though I do know that Channel Classics is one studio that intended to but actually work in DSD https://www.channelclassics.com/general-info/about-channel-classics/ They are in any case an outlier.
The standard in the industry these days is quickly becoming 24Bit/96K where as it's been 44.1K for music production and 48K for movie / TV audio production for the last 20+ years. It's common practice for mastering engineers to upsample to 96K and work there before converting to whatever res and format their customer desires.
If the intention is to release a 'high res' remastered recording the most common practice is to upsample material recorded at 44.1K or 48K to 96K and mix / remaster there and output at 96K. The delivery container for that could be PCM, DSD, MQA or converted back to analog for vinyl.
Nyquist’s Theorem states that we only need 44.1K to capture the highest frequencies for the human ear. While that's true it hasn't prevented exploration into the higher sampling rates. The question is whether the differences that can be heard there are natural or byproducts, namely distortion.
I'm not sure I've answered your question but I hope this helps.