Hi. A non-profit recording client of mine recently needed a set of MP3 sound clips to apply for a grant. The rules said that the maximum file size was 5 MB per sound clip, and the client wanted me to fit from 5-1/2 to 8-1/2 minutes of music into the various clips. That meant that I had to limit the bit rate to 80 kbps or, in the case of the one 8-1/2 minute clip, 64 kbps, which is distinctly low-fi. I'm used to 96 kbps as the basic rate for spoken word material, for example, and to my mind listenable music starts at maybe 128 kbps.
In a desire to squeeze better audio quality out of the available bandwidth, I decided to try VBR (variable bit rate) encoding, which adjusts itself to the complexity of the waveform at any given moment and reserves the most bits for the most complex musical passages. That approach sounds as if it should give higher sound quality than a constant bit rate (CBR) for any given file size, and various on-line references seemed to support this.
But at least the way I was using Adobe Audition 3.0, I sure didn't find that to be true. I could set the quality percentage to any value that I wanted between 1 and 100 and that way, generate files that were almost exactly 5 MB, but the sound really stank, even compared to 64 kbps (CBR) files that were less than 4 MB.
Can anyone explain to me why that is? And what advice would you give me if this comes up again and I have to stuff too much music into too small an MP3 file--how can I get the best (or the least bad) sound quality into a low bit rate MP3?
--best regards