Is it just placebo effect for audiophiles? Absolutely not. Here is why this specific resolution changes the gravitational pull of this record. Producer Martin Hannett famously treated the studio as a weapon. He despised the "live in a room" sound, instead building a cavernous, arctic soundscape using reverb chambers (including the legendary "cracked room" at Strawberry Studios) and a massive AMS digital delay.
The Analog Skeptic | Reading Time: 4 minutes Joy Division - Unknown Pleasures -24 bit FLAC- ...
But a new file has been making the rounds in collector circles: . Is it just placebo effect for audiophiles
Listen to the drum machine (the Transcendent 2000). In MP3 or lossy formats, the hi-hats collapse into a watery hiss. In , the metallic ring and the spatial placement of the percussion are forensic. You can hear the room tone between the drum hits—the hum of the mixing desk, the silence of a cold Manchester winter. Producer Martin Hannett famously treated the studio as
This isn't just a remaster. It is an exhumation. And it is beautiful.
Furthermore, Ian Curtis’s vocals. We know the lyrics are desperate, but the texture of his throat—the dry, close-mic’ed rasp before the chorus explodes—is often lost. High-resolution audio reveals the pre-delay on the reverb Hannett slapped on Curtis’s voice, making him sound like he is singing from the bottom of a well while standing right next to you. Unknown Pleasures is not a "quiet" album. There is tape hiss. There are analog artifacts. Some purists argue that 24-bit exposes the ugly underbelly of the recording.
There are albums you listen to, and then there are albums you inhabit . Joy Division’s 1979 masterpiece, Unknown Pleasures , falls squarely into the latter category. For decades, fans have tolerated the hiss of worn-out cassettes, the tinny compression of MP3s, and the surface noise of warped vinyl.