![]() This can cause stress if you have multiple pets and they know another bird is nearby. Males, in particular, can’t live together once they reach maturity and might think their territory stretches far beyond their cage. Also, while companion birds can encourage singing, many canaries are aggressive and should be kept separately. Have a few videos at the ready if you know you have company coming and want him to entertain. Check in with your vet if you notice a decrease in chirping and suspect something is stressing your bird.Ĭanaries are a favorite because of that beautiful song, but even the most talented birds might need a little encouragement now and then. However, a lack of his pretty song at other times might also be a sign of illness if it occurs unexpectedly. Your canary’s too busy shedding to think about his next big hit. Actually, you should expect him to stop entirely during his molt and don’t need to be concerned if that happens. Since your bird sings to impress the ladies, you will hear from him most frequently when he’s looking for his mate but infrequently during the molting season. ![]() Your bird concerts will ebb and flow with the season, most likely peaking in spring and ceasing in late summer. ![]() Play him a good mix until you find what strikes the right note. Some birds have a favorite type of music or artist, too. Don’t be afraid to add your voice to the mix, especially if you have a particularly hearty whistle. Ask what your new bird’s been exposed to and vary his playlist up a bit to encourage different tunes. Some pet stores also keep a particularly melodious canary around to help teach the younger birds a thing or two. In the era of high audio compression and low dynamic range in order to achieve the loudest sound (mine is bigger than yours) the occurrence of true peak artifacts is a reality and it is not to be ignored if one care about audio quality and its audio equipment well being.Canary Singing #1Master Training Spectacular Video Lossy audio files acquired from record pools are not checked for audio signal overload on playback (true peaks and clipping) and therefore audio compression artifacts may appear when digital audio signal is decoded and reconstructed in analog audio signal. This requires to make different adjustment to the audio material while taking into account the final audio format container (lossless or lossy). Afterwards I have the option to prepare the audio material, though normalisation and in some cases equalisation, in order to prevent audio signal overload (clipping). While many people prefer to buy music from various record pools in a compressed audio format, I prefer to buy music in an uncompressed audio format or make uncompressed audio backups from the original source (vinyl or CD). While Denon may choose or not to implement replay gain support in its hardware and software products, it is the user who must choose the quality of the material to be played back. And here I would dare to mention two issues: replay gain and true peaks. In our discussion about MP3 bitrates and compression algorithms, I feel that the most important aspect to be taken into account is the way audio content is mastered and then encoded for high quality playback. Hopefully that trend reverses itself in the future. It seems backwards to me, but I think it’s due to so many years of having mp3’s that we’ve just gotten accustomed to it. On that note, isn’t it funny that in the video world, we are constantly seeking better and better video quality… whether that’s through 8K movies or 4K HDR video gaming… yet in audio, specifically DJing, we are OK with having lower audio quality as we progress in technology. The world’s ears will thank you (especially at clubs… maybe not so much at less designed venues). Now that storage is so cheap and we have controllers like the Prime 4 available to us, with native lossless support, I think DJs should be taking advantage of the highest fidelity files possible. They were invented strictly to reduce file size and allow for the digitization of music collections - they were not invented to improve live performance or sound quality. Very true, and further, there’s really no need for lossy formats at all anymore. There’s no need for vbr anymore now that storage prices are dirt cheap
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