Running Time:
87 min
Release Date:
May 2016
Recording Location:
Khao Yai National Park, Thailand
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Khao Yai Rainforest
In the depths of Thailand's Khao Yai rainforest, birdsong filters down from the dense foliage above like shafts of sunlight.
Bulbuls, barbets, drongos, flycatchers, doves and laughing thrushes are heard calling occasionally during their forays through the canopy. Meanwhile a soft susuration of insects permeates the tropical air, and from far off in the distance come faint hints of gibbon song.
This is a single, unedited recording; a spacious ambience that changes gradually as time passes.
Andrew comments:
"This recording was made one morning while Sarah and I were photographing elsewhere in the forest. I left the microphones on just to see what they might capture. It was mid morning, and the rainforest was quietening down as the day progressed. At the time, I felt I hadn't got much at all. That it was all pretty quiet.
"It is only later, when I listened afresh, that I appreciated how relaxing this occasional birdsong and spacious atmosphere is to listen to."
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 (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.
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There is a lot of information about flac online (eg: http://flac.sourceforge.net/)