Super NES Music
Moderator: ZSNES Mods
Super NES Music
I have hundreds of Super NES music straight from the original games. I've been looking to share them. People on WinMX don't seem to look for them that often. If anyone has any requests, email me.
Nateconqpublic@yahoo.com
Nateconqpublic@yahoo.com
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- Dark Wind
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- Devil's Advocate
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- "Your thread will be crushed."
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Yes, it is. Ogg Vorbis sounds a lot better at lower bitrates than equivalent-bitrate MP3s. Ogg Vorbis is also smaller than equivalent-bitrate MP3s.Agozer wrote:No it isn't.Vareni Stargazer wrote:Why get anything in MP3 when OGG is so much nicer [and is an actual standard, whereas MP3 is just a compression scheme].
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Nicer I mean.
It sounds as if you are recording them from the console. One of my brothers was doing this over ten years ago, to cassette tapes. Now, we have thousands of SPC dumps, which are more useful than recordings, and free of analog line noise introduced during the recording process. You need only convert to lossy formats for players which lack support for the format.Nateconq wrote:I have hundreds of Super NES music straight from the original games.
http://www.rjamorim.com/test/multiforma ... sults.htmlVareni Stargazer wrote:Yes, it is. Ogg Vorbis sounds a lot better at lower bitrates than equivalent-bitrate MP3s. Ogg Vorbis is also smaller than equivalent-bitrate MP3s.Agozer wrote:No it isn't.Vareni Stargazer wrote:Why get anything in MP3 when OGG is so much nicer [and is an actual standard, whereas MP3 is just a compression scheme].
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Nicer I mean.
A blind listening test at 128kbps also agrees. The tunings from Vorbis aoTuV have been merged into Vorbis 1.1, although Aoyumi continues to work on his branch.
Musepack is also a decent alternative, and for those interested in working with low power portable systems, the decoding requirements are less than that of MP3, which is already has a less complex decoding process than Ogg Vorbis.
Also, considering where iTunes stands in that test, and how Nero's AAC encoder has improved relative to iTunes, it is also a viable alternative for the future.
Ah, but who wants to change their preferred compression scheme every time something new comes along? Certainly, those who are bored can take a little time to weigh the alternatives and decide if any of them are more efficient for future archiving.
Or, use all that spare hard drive space and encode lossless once, and only weigh the benefits of future lossless encoders, deciding whether you care more about compression ratio or processing power required to play the files. Then, you may only have to worry about lossy compression if you need that much music in your portable player. (Yes, there are portables which support FLAC, just one of many lossless codecs.)
Bah. Specialities.Vareni Stargazer wrote:Yes, it is. Ogg Vorbis sounds a lot better at lower bitrates than equivalent-bitrate MP3s. Ogg Vorbis is also smaller than equivalent-bitrate MP3s.Agozer wrote:No it isn't.Vareni Stargazer wrote:Why get anything in MP3 when OGG is so much nicer [and is an actual standard, whereas MP3 is just a compression scheme].
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Nicer I mean.

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- Dark Wind
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Yep, that's why I use FLAC. Plenty of hard drive space, and I got tired of re-encoding my MP3s every time a version of LAME came out with significant differences.kode54 wrote:Ah, but who wants to change their preferred compression scheme every time something new comes along? Certainly, those who are bored can take a little time to weigh the alternatives and decide if any of them are more efficient for future archiving.
Or, use all that spare hard drive space and encode lossless once, and only weigh the benefits of future lossless encoders, deciding whether you care more about compression ratio or processing power required to play the files. Then, you may only have to worry about lossy compression if you need that much music in your portable player. (Yes, there are portables which support FLAC, just one of many lossless codecs.)
I also want to get a Rio Karma at some point.
[u][url=http://bash.org/?577451]#577451[/url][/u]
If you convert the SPCs to wav and burn those to cd, it'll sound a lot betterIceFox wrote:So you can burn them to a CD, then play them in a portable CD player.Evan wrote:Why would you use space consuming MP3s when SPC files are relatively small and are easily played using Winamp?

Mp3 fxxkin' sucks at any bitrate and any encoder. Too bad it has so much hardware support while other good sounding lossy formats (mpc/vorbis/aac) don't have so much support.
I download the SPCs and convert them to MP3's at 160 Kb/s and 44100 Hz. It sounds like you're listening to a Super NES, which is what I was aiming for. Look, I'm trying to find a way to share these. Anyone know a good site? Or just request from me through my email.
Secret of Mana + Mega Man X3 + Seiken Densetsu III + Castlevania IV