My ears are excellent - I am not paying enough attention to sound quality - I can differentiate hence the investment - High Bitrates Mp3 sound very poor compared to a Audio CD......Thanks Sharad........
But I am still curious on how many will be able to tell the difference between a MP3 mastered at 256kbps and above and a audio CD in blind A/B testing.
There is an article on this:MP3 vs. CD Audio Quality Tests
Do a very simple test yourself and record a 18000Hz Signal in uncompressed wav format in Adobe Audition (Generate > Tones) and convert it into MP3 128Kbps after playing the wav file and see for yourself the difference in reproduction.
Absolutly no loss even at 128Kbps.( See The Frequency Analysers set at Linear View) The same goes for low frequency generation and any sine waves or squared sine wave. I have done repeated experiments with MP3 and come to the conclusion that its very difficult for a average Human Listener to differientiate between them.You can try this with any Brown/ Pink or White Noise set at spatial stereo / inverse or mono and let me know what difference you are getting.Auditory Masking that is used in Mp3 design is almost impossible to identify at high bit rates by any average human.
Though i do believe in the gist, but I cannot agree fully to your experiment.
The sound that we hear from musical instruments is not pure sine waves at single frequency.
It is a complex wave which can be thought os as composed of lots of sine waves. Mostly harmonics.
And another thing to note is that it is not that a single instrument is playing a single note.
Differnet instruments play differnet notes simulataneously. This interharmonic modulation is something that you can hear and feel even though mathematically you can show that mp3 at 128 kbps retains same sine wave at 18000 Hz.
However, I do agree - 256 kbps offers a reasonable accuracy of signal, that mortal human beings will fail at the double blind test.
I will fail at 192 because of the reasons I posted earlier.