Let’s Talk about the Best Lossless Audio Player for Android

losslesss audio multimedia

Let’s Talk about the Best Lossless Audio Player for Android

Apart from Spotify and Apple Music, if you have your own music in lossless audio format, you should also be able to play them on your Android devices.
After both these streaming services announced support for high-quality audio streaming, there was a lot of hype around lossless audio files.

But What Exactly Is Lossless Audio ?

Lossless audio is a high-fidelity (Hi-Fi) file format, with CDs recorded at 1411kbps. It preserves all the details of the audio track without losing any quality. Your music just sounds so clear and nice to listen to. It certainly does not sound muffled and distorted by comparison to old vinyls for instance.

MP3 have dominated the streaming scene during a decade. Now, we already know that a 320kbps mp3 file should be indistinguishable from a CD to the ear. However, it is worth noting that MP3 compression sometimes creates distortion
and a “pixelated” brittle brightness that many people had taken to be a pleasing sound.

Have you ever tried to find a reason for the temporary bad sound quality? Well, it may depend on the source for
your mp3 files and whether they are stereo or mono, a factory made file download from ITunes, from a CD or even a vinyl rip.

Nowadays, modern mastering uses compression which highlights softer and more background sounds in the mix.
Radio stations for instance still use a great deal of compression. That may be why you don’t notice a fade until the track is really faded out.

Still Looking for the Best Music Player ?

Granted, if you wanted to build your own music library you could just copy everything directly to the Android storage. However what if you were looking for the best looking music player out there ?

If you want to build a local music collection, Phonograph is an open source music player designed for Android. It organizes the music in your Android smartphone by album and artists. You can also take a look at the playlists you’ve stored and create new playlists in no time.

You don’t have to keep paying a recurring cost to have access to your music. You can play it on any device or player you want, not just the ones built specifically for a given streaming surface.

So, if you already have a laptop/desktop, some headphones, and if you know how to send files to your phone or tablet without a wire or send them across a USB cable, then just buy some tracks on Soundcloud, Bandcamp or download the content of some old CDs and that should do the trick !

Just don’t forget to back everything up to a disk or cloud service you already use to automate your backups !

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