Beginner's Guide to Music File Formats
Beginner's Guide to Music File Formats
Many people are confused by the various types of music file formats
out there? Most of you would have heard of the popular MP3 format,
but are you aware there are other alternative digital music formats
like WAV, WMA, RA and MIDI? Some of these give better sound quality
than MP3 (e.g. the WAV format) but also need more disk storage space.
Others like WMA give file sizes smaller than the MP3 format and
are more suited for portable music players.
Let's run through the various file formats now:
The MP3 File Format - MP3 files have the extension ".mp3" and are
available for download from many web sites. MP3 (MPEG-1 Audio Layer-3)
technology compresses a sound sequence into a very small file (usually
1/12 of the original file size). The designers of MP3 compression
algorithm managed to do this by eliminating sounds that the human
ear cannot perceive. While MP3 technology is impressive, it has
been abused by music pirates. One can very easily create MP3 files
from commercial CDs and make them available for download. The RIAA
and major music companies have been cracking down on the distribution
and sharing of MP3 files in this manner.
The WMA File Format - WMA-Windows Media Audio is Microsoft's proprietary
music file format that it is marketing aggressively. WMA files are
smaller in size than MP3 files, but still retain a decent level
of sound quality. This format is getting very popular in websites
for sampling music and also in portable music players. However,
whether WMA will overtake the popularity of MP3 remains to be seen.
The WAV File Format - A wave file is characterized by the file
extension ".wav". This music file format provides raw, uncompressed
audio data. Originally invented by Microsoft, wave files are still
used widely (examples include your start up and shut down sounds
in Windows). Audio quality is excellent, but the file size is huge.
A full pop song in wave format may take up to 30 MB of disk space
or more.
The AIFF File Format - The AIFF (Audio Interchange File Format)
is a popular music file formats used in the Apple Macintosh operating
system. In a way, they are the Macintosh equivalent of wave files.
AIFF files have the file extension ".aif" when accessed via a PC.
They contain raw audio data (which result in excellent sound quality)
but take up a large amount of disk space.
The MIDI File Format - The MIDI (Musical Instrument Digital Interface)
file format was originally created for recording and playing music
on digital synthesizers. MIDI files are very small in size. The
reason for this is that the MIDI file only contains information
on how music is produced, which is note-ons and note-offs. The sound
card which plays back the MIDI file takes this information and plays
back music using an in-built sound card wave table.
The RA File Format - RA (Real Audio) files support streaming technology.
Created by Progressive Networks, an RA file is highly optimized
for live, streaming audio from websites. RA files are best played
back on Real Audio players which are freely downloadable from Progressive
Networks.
Now for the Conclusion - The coverage of the most popular
music file formats out there have been explained. You may be interested to know that
there are many software applications which can convert music from
one format to another, like MP3 to WAV or WAV to AIFF.