Running Time:
63 min
Release Date:
March 2010
Recording Location:
Track 1. Satkosia Forest, Orissa, India.
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Track 2. Near Agonda village, Goa, India
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Cheery Bulbuls!
Bulbuls have some of the most delightful and cheerful songs of all India's birds.
There are many species found across Asia, but the Red-whiskered and Red-vented Bulbuls of India have particularly pretty songs, and are commonly heard in woodlands and forests across the country.
Here we listen to them singing in the wild, where their joyful songs and perky personalities enliven the countryside, from woodlands adjacent to traditional villages, to the depths of evergreen forests.
Here is an album of birdsong that will make you smile.
Audio sample of this album
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Mp3:
Mp3 is a universal audio format, playable on iPods, computers, media players and mobile phones.
Mp3 is a compressed format, allowing smaller filesizes, offering faster download times and requiring less storage space on players, but at some expense to the audio quality. Many listeners can't really hear the difference between mp3 and full CD-quality audio, and hence its convenience has lead to it becoming the default option for audio.
Our albums are generally encoded at around 256kbps (sometimes with VBR), balancing optimal audio quality without blowing out filesizes excessively. We encode using the Fraunhoffer algorithm, which preserves more detail in the human audible range than the lame encoder.
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FLAC:
FLAC is a high-quality audio format, allowing CD-resolution audio. It is ideal if you wish to burn your files to a CDR, or listen over a high resolution audio system. However files usually require special decoding by the user before playing or burning to disc.
FLAC (Free Lossless Audio Codec) is a LOSSLESS compressed audio format. This means that it preserves the full audio quality of a CD, but optimises the filesize for downloading. Typically, file sizes of around 60% are achieved without any degradation or loss of audio quality from the source files at the CD standard of 16bit/44.1kHz.
Obviously the file sizes are larger than for the mp3 version - usually around 300-400Mb for an album, compared to 100Mb for an mp3 album.
In addition, you'll need to know what to do with the files once you've downloaded them. In most cases you'll want to decode the files to wav or aiff, either to import into programs like iTunes, or burn to CDR. Some programs will play flac files natively.
There is a lot of information about flac online (eg: http://flac.sourceforge.net/)