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Out of Pod Experience

 
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About that Harmonic Orchestra recording...

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Author
Krixtal Icefluxor
INLAND EMPIRE Galactic
#41 - 2013-08-20 17:07:00 UTC
Khanh'rhh wrote:

It's easier to understand because it's a completely different process and not related in any way.




Y'know, you have the same problem that younger filmmakers have now, that is resulting in almost every single blockbuster release this summer tanking horrifically at the boxoffice.

They can only understand the technical aspects of filmmaking, and know nothing of much less understand, The Language of Cinema.

"He has mounted his hind-legs, and blown crass vapidities through the bowel of his neck."  - Ambrose Bierce on Oscar Wilde's Lecture in San Francisco 1882

Whitehound
#42 - 2013-08-20 17:25:20 UTC  |  Edited by: Whitehound
Khanh'rhh wrote:
It's easier to understand because it's a completely different process and not related in any way.

We can't hear well enough to grade a sound played for 1/44,100th of a second into 256 discrete levels no matter how many times people ignore evidence to the contrary and make up ~audiophile language~ to explain how they can.

The vast majority of self-claimed audiophiles can't double-blind test 192kbps AAC, which is taking the CD version and throwing ~87% of it away.

Our perception systems are very easily fooled and we're pretty bad at doing this as a species.

Hence my comparison with photography, where we can see the difference more clearly.

I could not tell the difference between a raw digital image and a high quality JPEG either. But I sure can tell both apart from an analogue picture. Can you?

Loss is meaningful. Therefore is the loss of meaning likewise meaningful. It is the source of all trolling.

Khanh'rhh
Sparkle Motion.
#43 - 2013-08-20 19:35:03 UTC  |  Edited by: Khanh'rhh
Whitehound wrote:
Hence my comparison with photography, where we can see the difference more clearly.

I could not tell the difference between a raw digital image and a high quality JPEG either. But I sure can tell both apart from an analogue picture. Can you?

Yes, but that's my point. In photography you can see the differences quite clearly, in music, nope.
It has everything to do with signal information, and acuity - when you're looking at a photograph your brain is processing the image based on longterm exposure to the medium; the same information. Your eye can also see more colours than any of the colour-spaces that can be described with common 8-bit images. You can literally perceive every pixel and the colour of it.

With (CD) audio your brain is *not* telling you it's perception of each frame of music. You hear a snare drum, you don't get 90,000 samples with a resolution of 8-bits per channel into your perception system, your brain has already made massive amounts of assumptions and discarded most sounds out of your perceptual space - this is how an MP3/AAC file can discard 80+% of the audio signal and you can't tell the difference - because the codec knows what you can't perceive and discards it.
This is a very good thing, because if your brain didn't lock onto certain audio signals and cues and push that to your perception, we'd not be able to do things like hold conversations in a noisy space, or pick your conversation out in a restaurant over the others.
With raw CD audio, it's more complex than that - the 44.1khz sample rate means it can represent, with no deviation from source, every frequency between 0 and 22,050hz - this is wider than the human hearing range and so we simply can't perceive the difference in-between that, and a source that also has things going on over 22khz.
Indeed, not only can people not double-blind 44.1khz/16bit CD from Vinyl or 24bit/48khz, but you can go quite far below 44.1 as a sampling frequency before people start being able to spot the difference. Useful if you want to apply quite heavy compression.

For any other purpose, a medium which is literally designed to be able to hold any frequency the human ear can hear is good enough Blink

n.b. if you're over 30, good luck hearing much above 15-16k anyway.

"Do not touch anything unnecessarily. Beware of pretty girls in dance halls and parks who may be spies, as well as bicycles, revolvers, uniforms, arms, dead horses, and men lying on roads -- they are not there accidentally." -Soviet infantry manual,

Whitehound
#44 - 2013-08-20 21:46:03 UTC  |  Edited by: Whitehound
Khanh'rhh wrote:
Whitehound wrote:
Hence my comparison with photography, where we can see the difference more clearly.

I could not tell the difference between a raw digital image and a high quality JPEG either. But I sure can tell both apart from an analogue picture. Can you?

Yes, but that's my point. In photography you can see the differences quite clearly, in music, nope.
It has everything to do with signal information, and acuity - when you're looking at a photograph your brain is processing the image based on longterm exposure to the medium; the same information. Your eye can also see more colours than any of the colour-spaces that can be described with common 8-bit images. You can literally perceive every pixel and the colour of it.

With (CD) audio your brain is *not* telling you it's perception of each frame of music. You hear a snare drum, you don't get 90,000 samples with a resolution of 8-bits per channel into your perception system, your brain has already made massive amounts of assumptions and discarded most sounds out of your perceptual space - this is how an MP3/AAC file can discard 80+% of the audio signal and you can't tell the difference - because the codec knows what you can't perceive and discards it.
This is a very good thing, because if your brain didn't lock onto certain audio signals and cues and push that to your perception, we'd not be able to do things like hold conversations in a noisy space, or pick your conversation out in a restaurant over the others.
With raw CD audio, it's more complex than that - the 44.1khz sample rate means it can represent, with no deviation from source, every frequency between 0 and 22,050hz - this is wider than the human hearing range and so we simply can't perceive the difference in-between that, and a source that also has things going on over 22khz.
Indeed, not only can people not double-blind 44.1khz/16bit CD from Vinyl or 24bit/48khz, but you can go quite far below 44.1 as a sampling frequency before people start being able to spot the difference. Useful if you want to apply quite heavy compression.

For any other purpose, a medium which is literally designed to be able to hold any frequency the human ear can hear is good enough Blink

n.b. if you're over 30, good luck hearing much above 15-16k anyway.

You could reduce an image down to one pixel and I could not even tell two similar colours apart. You could reduce music down into a single tone, and I could not tell two similar tones apart. But paint a picture consisting out of two similar colours and I can start to see it. Take two similar tones and combine them to music and I can start to hear it.

This is what you should think about. Your mistake is to think music is not more than a collection of frequencies, just like a picture was not more than coloured dots. Therefore do you falsely conclude that anything made out of it can also not be recognized. What matters is the sum of it all and not how much you can take away from it before it becomes distorted.

Of course, modern compression algorithms are complex. Music gets fourier-transformed and taken apart into bands of frequencies to avoid the problem of distortions. Similar happens with digital pictures, which get transformed into two dimensional waves.

Were bits before the new "grain" of information that allowed distortions are now these transformations the new "grain". They make it particularly difficult to tell one sound apart from another, because the transformations follow harmonies and the brain likes harmonies and assumes it has to be the real thing even when you know it cannot be.

You have dug yourself in so deep in the belief that if you only focus on scientific facts you then could not be wrong. But do you understand that the industry, who pays for the research mainly wants to reduce the data size of recordings as much as possible without not losing too much of it? The whole psycho-acoustic profiling is not different from a shrink telling you that everything in your life is good and you should be happy while he fills his pockets with your money. Then one day will you stand in front of a real piano and cannot believe your ears!

Loss is meaningful. Therefore is the loss of meaning likewise meaningful. It is the source of all trolling.

Khanh'rhh
Sparkle Motion.
#45 - 2013-08-20 22:55:47 UTC  |  Edited by: Khanh'rhh
Whitehound wrote:
What matters is the sum of it all and not how much you can take away from it before it becomes distorted

What matters to which medium is better is whether or not you can perceive a difference between one medium and another. Which people can't.
The rest of it is just you convincing yourself the above isn't true in whatever way you can.
Quote:
You have dug yourself in so deep in the belief that if you only focus on scientific facts you then could not be wrong

Do you want me to believe in fairies, instead? Yes, when discussing facts, facts tend to be pretty relevant. I am sorry this is inconvenient for your argument built on flowery thinking and invented nonsense.
Quote:
But do you understand that the industry, who pays for the research

You could have clicked on the link and seen it was independent. Or, you can use any search engine of your choice to determine the same information based on sources you find independent enough.
On searching, the only people I can find talking up a storm about how great 24bit audio is, are people who are writing about it on a page where it's sold.

Huh.

Weird.

"Do not touch anything unnecessarily. Beware of pretty girls in dance halls and parks who may be spies, as well as bicycles, revolvers, uniforms, arms, dead horses, and men lying on roads -- they are not there accidentally." -Soviet infantry manual,

Lucas Kell
Solitude Trading
S.N.O.T.
#46 - 2013-08-20 23:13:50 UTC
Khanh'rhh wrote:
a) There's no evidence people can innately tell digital from analogue - literally all the tests show the opposite, in fact. Between digital and higher bandwidth/fidelity digital (i.e. 24bit/48khz) has also shown to be impossible.
b) There's pretty definitive evidence people can't hear outside of normal hearing ranges.
Are you trolling by literally posting the opposite of what is factually supported? Because goddamn.

While you can't "hear" outside of normal ranges, it's also been shown that exposure to high and low frequencies that are inaudible can bring out emotional responses. Just because you can't process those sound waves as noise, doesn't mean they don't cause your ears to react. I prefer the sound of vinyl to digital. It feels warmer and more natural to me. That's about as much proof as I need.
Khanh'rhh wrote:
If you prefer worn recordings that don't sound like the artists intended, then there's no problem with that

Most of the music I listen to is a lot older. The artist intended for it to be heard like this, as digital didn't exist when they created it.

The Indecisive Noob - EVE fan blog.

Wholesale Trading - The new bulk trading mailing list.

Lady Areola Fappington
#47 - 2013-08-20 23:35:29 UTC
You get the same thing with video equipment nowdays. I've heard lots of complaint from older folks that HD video looks "too real" to them. When you come to expect a certain amount of distortion, any improvement or degradation of signal seems "wrong".

7.2 CAN I AVOID PVP COMPLETELY? No; there are no systems or locations in New Eden where PvP may be completely avoided. --Eve New Player Guide

Krixtal Icefluxor
INLAND EMPIRE Galactic
#48 - 2013-08-21 00:00:29 UTC  |  Edited by: Krixtal Icefluxor
Lucas Kell wrote:

Most of the music I listen to is a lot older. The artist intended for it to be heard like this, as digital didn't exist when they created it.


Don't feel bad. You are yacking here with folks who would want some kind of 'technical proof' that Picasso was superior to Braque, which would come down to brushstrokes and composition and color choice really.

And Picasso is much more than a collection of 'perfect' brushstrokes. It fact his 'brushstrokes' were originally deemed as terrible along with his compositions.

Gus Van Zant's shot for shot literal re-photographing of Hitchcock's "Psycho" is a case in point. Absolute replication cannot even deliver the same product and it's tone and feeling....at all.

These are ineffable, evanescent distinctions for which there is no language or mechanic.

edit: Leading to these guys tripping all over themselves to mechanically 'prove' an artistic superiority, something that can only be determined by each individual's own aesthetic attentiveness and sensibilities.

Digital may be a superior format, but it does not and cannot replicate the analogue.

A tomato may indeed be a fruit, but you'll never find it in a southern fruit salad. Ever.

"He has mounted his hind-legs, and blown crass vapidities through the bowel of his neck."  - Ambrose Bierce on Oscar Wilde's Lecture in San Francisco 1882

ashley Eoner
#49 - 2013-08-21 01:31:37 UTC  |  Edited by: ashley Eoner
mechtech wrote:
Technically, 95%+ of people won't be able to A/B test 256kbps MP3 vs FLAC. Only extremely trained ears with hi-fi equipment will have any success A/B testing 320kbps vs FLAC.

44.1/48khz vs 96/192khz recording is another difference virtually nobody can A/B test.

What is important is how the music was mastered. If it was mastered for vinyl and you have a digital version, you might not be getting the experience that the producer intended. This is no different than film, where say, a Kubrick film with particular written instructions for the projectionist simply won't have the same experience if remastered into higher quality digital.

But these days, assuming you're not listening to music recorded by a retro studio with 1970s era equipment, you're getting a perfect audio experience listening to CD quality digital.

That's not to say that some people don't like a bit of coloration to their sound. I'm one of them. I have neutral reference headphones (DT880), and I like the warmth and body that a tube amp adds. I certainly won't say it's improving that quality though, the analog component is just degrading the signal in a way that I happen to enjoy.

The only "digital sucks" argument that really has any credence is basic bitrates. On high end equipment, anything less than 320kbps will have a noticeable reduction in bass quality (and high end, if you have good ears). It's a shame that 128kbps is the standard, because it has obvious shortcomings even on midrange equipment.



As for the OP, the CD comes with 144kbps tracks? CD standard is LPCM 44100 Hz 16 bits == 1411 kbps (generic .wav file you get from a CD rip). It would be a shame if the original recording was done low bitrate :/
Indeed I can hear degradation on the high and low end with any mp3 below 320 Kbps. That said with a good quality recording I can usually tell the difference between 320 and flac. These days with the prevalence of the loudness war and the general tendency towards crap quality recordings (don't get me started on the massive amount of autotuning) it's hard to tell the difference on some of the newer stuff.

I use flac exclusively for my digital copies because I actually run a good quality stereo setup on my computer. Xonar ST output to a vintage pioneer sx-1250 (in excellent condition with minimal reconditioning) which outputs to a pair of floor standing speakers and a class a/b fully regulated 600 watt rms subwoofer setup. I have a flat output from 20-25k hz with audible output from 5-30k hz (I use test tones and a db meter to confirm). If you're running a set of junk speakers or headphones you wouldn't notice the difference between mp3 and flac let alone vinal and digital..


Lady Areola Fappington wrote:
You get the same thing with video equipment nowdays. I've heard lots of complaint from older folks that HD video looks "too real" to them. When you come to expect a certain amount of distortion, any improvement or degradation of signal seems "wrong".
I actually have that issue when watching HD tv on a top end tv setup. It just looks weird and way too detailed for my older brain to comprehend properly.
Caviar Liberta
The Scope
Gallente Federation
#50 - 2013-08-21 04:58:11 UTC
Krixtal Icefluxor wrote:
Spurty wrote:

RPMs on turn tables (cheap ones especially) were rarely correct.
Do miss cheap giggles playing queen tunes at 72rpm when made for 33.333333


Welp, you weren't there then and don't know.

After about 1978 it was standard for turntables to have speed adjustment wheels so yes they were 100% accurate.....as accurate as you are wrong.

Also, make that 78 RPM and I may believe you are over 30 yo.


33 1/3 --- Long Play Albums

45 --- Singles

78 --- Was replaced by the 45 (had to look this up)
Whitehound
#51 - 2013-08-21 06:45:25 UTC  |  Edited by: Whitehound
Khanh'rhh wrote:
Whitehound wrote:
What matters is the sum of it all and not how much you can take away from it before it becomes distorted

What matters to which medium is better is whether or not you can perceive a difference between one medium and another. Which people can't.
The rest of it is just you convincing yourself the above isn't true in whatever way you can.
Quote:
You have dug yourself in so deep in the belief that if you only focus on scientific facts you then could not be wrong

Do you want me to believe in fairies, instead? Yes, when discussing facts, facts tend to be pretty relevant. I am sorry this is inconvenient for your argument built on flowery thinking and invented nonsense.
Quote:
But do you understand that the industry, who pays for the research

You could have clicked on the link and seen it was independent. Or, you can use any search engine of your choice to determine the same information based on sources you find independent enough.
On searching, the only people I can find talking up a storm about how great 24bit audio is, are people who are writing about it on a page where it's sold.

Huh.

Weird.

Fact is that the human ear picks up sounds through tiny hairs. There is only so much space inside an ear and each hair needs space to vibrate in order to pick up its frequency, which understandably limits the number of hairs one can have inside an ear. As a result of this scientific fact have the so called independent audio experts decided that each human ear has got exactly 576 tiny hairs and that these must grow in an harmonic pattern! Roll

Now do take a look at people and their ears and their hairs and tell me that this is all right.

It is all right when one makes an assumption like this in order to reduce the size of audio data, but to use it to say that nobody could ever hear a difference between compressed audio and the original is just plain ignorant. It is like saying that all ears and all hair was the same, which is nonsense.

Loss is meaningful. Therefore is the loss of meaning likewise meaningful. It is the source of all trolling.

Krixtal Icefluxor
INLAND EMPIRE Galactic
#52 - 2013-08-21 10:53:14 UTC
See what happens when you try to argue technical fine points to prove aesthetic integrity ?

You wind up discussing ear hair. Big smile

"He has mounted his hind-legs, and blown crass vapidities through the bowel of his neck."  - Ambrose Bierce on Oscar Wilde's Lecture in San Francisco 1882

Eram Fidard
Doomheim
#53 - 2013-08-21 14:50:16 UTC
Unless you have followed scientific method in your experiments/testing you cannot say anything factually about this, sorry.

Eliminating all variables in recording and output, this audio expert in 1984 could not succeed in a double-blind study where the digital signal was produced at ~13 bits.

And here you come, claiming you can 'tell the difference' when today's digital conversion is done around 24 bits.

So I guess, in your double-blind test (an a-b-x switch where x is randomised between a and b at the start of each test) you carefully equalised each signal to the same frequency levels, using hi-fidelity equipment to test and play the signal. Then you ran series of objective trials, both with the signal, with no signal (listening for the noise), and eliminated any tendency to guess based on other variables such as the clicking of the a-b-x switch?

No?

Time for you to duck out gracefully then....you were wrong in 1984 and with today's advances in sound technology you're even more wrong today. Factually.

Poster is not to be held responsible for damages to keyboards and/or noses caused by hot beverages.

Sal Landry
School of Applied Knowledge
Caldari State
#54 - 2013-08-21 15:24:22 UTC
Krixtal Icefluxor wrote:
See what happens when you try to argue technical fine points to prove aesthetic integrity ?

You wind up discussing ear hair. Big smile

The Goon is discussing technical fine points.

You are discussing religion.
Krixtal Icefluxor
INLAND EMPIRE Galactic
#55 - 2013-08-21 15:37:51 UTC
Sal Landry wrote:
Krixtal Icefluxor wrote:
See what happens when you try to argue technical fine points to prove aesthetic integrity ?

You wind up discussing ear hair. Big smile

The Goon is discussing technical fine points.

You are discussing religion.



U drunk, bro Smile

"He has mounted his hind-legs, and blown crass vapidities through the bowel of his neck."  - Ambrose Bierce on Oscar Wilde's Lecture in San Francisco 1882

Tippia
Sunshine and Lollipops
#56 - 2013-08-21 15:59:08 UTC
Khanh'rhh wrote:
Our perception systems are very easily fooled and we're pretty bad at doing this as a species.

Aside from physiological limitations, there's also the psychological reaction to stimulus, and much of that is simple taught reaction.

There are plenty of examples where higher fidelity creates a perception of worse quality because it's not the fidelity we have taught ourselves to prefer. High-res 50fps films and high-bit/high-sample audio are two of those because we have long since learned that the imprecise blur of 24fps from 35mm is how a film “should look”, and the inherent imperfections of rubbing stone or metal against plastic is what recorded music “should sound” like.

Imperfections create character and our perception system doesn't care much for details since it's all being pattern-matched anyway and the detail don't make that much of a difference, whereas character gives that pattern-matching machine something fun and stimulating to chew on.
Whitehound
#57 - 2013-08-21 16:11:59 UTC  |  Edited by: Whitehound
Sal Landry wrote:
Krixtal Icefluxor wrote:
See what happens when you try to argue technical fine points to prove aesthetic integrity ?

You wind up discussing ear hair. Big smile

The Goon is discussing technical fine points.

You are discussing religion.

I just leave this here. An Audio Expert

The audio expert was interviewed for his definition of music, too.

Loss is meaningful. Therefore is the loss of meaning likewise meaningful. It is the source of all trolling.

Ekhss Nihilo
The Night Watchmen
Goonswarm Federation
#58 - 2013-08-21 16:24:16 UTC
Doc Fury wrote:
Kirjava wrote:
I assumed they would have recorded it in either analogue or a very high fidelity digital for editing from the original recording.

I'm kinda new to this side of audio to be honest Oops


Recording in all analog is still done, just not very often. Once a recording has been in digital form however, copies taken from that lose all the "good stuff" that having an analog copy preserves.

Drums are often recorded via analog methods, and then the tracks are bounced to digital copies for mixing/editing/mastering with the other instrument and/or vocal tracks. Some guitar purists will only record playing through tube amps and tube microphones (for analog warmth) but the recording of that is still done digitally.


brinelan wrote:
Do records really sound better? I hear that every now and then but I haven't used a record player since I had a fisher price one as a kid and 5 year olds generally don't care about sound quality.


If you can really tell the difference (using good quality playback gear and recordings) you might just be an audiophile. Most people can't, and after we all get to be about 30, we have lost a lot of our high frequency hearing above 14Khz anyway.

I still listen to my collection of vinyl records. some of which are more than 50 years old. The difference between a good analog recording laid down on quality vinyl and digital media is palpable. for example, I have two copies of Mahler's 8th - one on vinyl and the other on CD. The analog edition blows the digital one away. Depth, warmth, and the feel of the concert hall are all superior on the vinyl LP.

Modern analog recording has been undergoing a quiet revival and we're seeing some great material these days. My rig:

Magneplanar MG 20Rs
Pass X350 power amp
Audio Research REF2 preamp
Accuphase DP 75 CD player
Linn-Sondek LP 12 (all mods) w/ Dynavector Ruby cartridge

Music and mathematics are the language of God. This just helps me hear a little bit better.

"The object in life is not to be on the side of the majority, but to escape finding oneself in the ranks of the insane." -- Marcus Aurelius (AD 121-180)

Khanh'rhh
Sparkle Motion.
#59 - 2013-08-21 19:37:23 UTC
Whitehound wrote:
It is all right when one makes an assumption like this in order to reduce the size of audio data, but to use it to say that nobody could ever hear a difference between compressed audio and the original is just plain ignorant. It is like saying that all ears and all hair was the same, which is nonsense.

You know, we've probably talked across one another. I'm claiming people can't tell the difference between Vinyl and a digital representation of the same recording, not that lossy compression is 100% transparent. My comments on lossy compression were to show that not only is CD more than sufficient for the task, but you can also compress THAT down by massive amounts and most self-proclaimed audiophiles can't tell whether it's source, or a version which discards 80% of the signal.
Some can, and if you use problem samples and train yourself to know what an artefact sounds like, you can do it pretty reliably. Until you get to 256 and above, where you need simulated samples and near-square waves to be able to do it.
Tippia wrote:
Khanh'rhh wrote:
Our perception systems are very easily fooled and we're pretty bad at doing this as a species.

Aside from physiological limitations, there's also the psychological reaction to stimulus, and much of that is simple taught reaction.

There are plenty of examples where higher fidelity creates a perception of worse quality because it's not the fidelity we have taught ourselves to prefer. High-res 50fps films and high-bit/high-sample audio are two of those because we have long since learned that the imprecise blur of 24fps from 35mm is how a film “should look”, and the inherent imperfections of rubbing stone or metal against plastic is what recorded music “should sound” like.

Imperfections create character and our perception system doesn't care much for details since it's all being pattern-matched anyway and the detail don't make that much of a difference, whereas character gives that pattern-matching machine something fun and stimulating to chew on.

Yeah, well I did already claim if you prefer vinyl for it's ... vinylness .. then you'll not be persuaded out of it. It's a different medium and that imbues certain elements of it. That said, if you digitise a vinyl record you can have the benefits of both - digital precision and no degradation, and you've recorded all the pops, burr and hiss to make the record "warm" or whatever.
Ekhss Nihilo wrote:
The difference between a good analog recording laid down on quality vinyl and digital media is palpable.

No. Your internalised belief you are hearing something of higher quality is palpable.

One of my favourite audiophile experiments was from the late 90's. A researcher setup testing whether people could hear the difference between all the common culprits - vinyl and digital, $4000 per metre cable and coathangers, and so on. The results were a predictable "no" along with audiophile hoo-har about how asking them to hear the difference is unreasonable because ~reasons~ and whatever.
He did another experiment where he asked people to rate the quality of an audio setup after telling them the cost. The result was a fairly linear (and statistically significant) correlation.
Only, it was the same HiFi each time.

People pretty much hear what they're told they'll hear, whether they want to or not. There's people who will, having not understood how something like HDMI cables work, will write a few thousand words of reviews about which is better. Which has the "clearer blacks" the "warmer skin tones" and "cleaner transients" and so on.

Hint: it is literally impossible for there to be a difference.

"Do not touch anything unnecessarily. Beware of pretty girls in dance halls and parks who may be spies, as well as bicycles, revolvers, uniforms, arms, dead horses, and men lying on roads -- they are not there accidentally." -Soviet infantry manual,

Khanh'rhh
Sparkle Motion.
#60 - 2013-08-21 19:45:49 UTC  |  Edited by: Khanh'rhh
Lucas Kell wrote:
While you can't "hear" outside of normal ranges, it's also been shown that exposure to high and low frequencies that are inaudible can bring out emotional responses. Just because you can't process those sound waves as noise, doesn't mean they don't cause your ears to react. I prefer the sound of vinyl to digital. It feels warmer and more natural to me. That's about as much proof as I need.

Other than "but no one can prove this, weirdly" there are two major issues with this
a) The recording will be low-passed at some point anyway
b) Super-sonic frequencies would wear off a vinyl with a single-digit playcount
Bonus c) This theory has been tested using digital media that supports playing those frequencies accurately, and no detectable difference is heard.

"Do not touch anything unnecessarily. Beware of pretty girls in dance halls and parks who may be spies, as well as bicycles, revolvers, uniforms, arms, dead horses, and men lying on roads -- they are not there accidentally." -Soviet infantry manual,