I assume these tracks claim to use frequencies that are inaudible to human ears but irritate raccoons. But most if not all lossy compression algorithms eliminate human-inaudible frequencies. So... yeah.
Not sure if it's still true, but YouTube used to only support 2.1 audio output.
In that timeframe, my compatriots were not aware of this and several of them upgraded their home theaters to 5.1 or better.
For some reason, the myriad videos on YouTube claiming to help you test your 5.1 setup never seemed to get the results they wanted ...
I assume these tracks claim to use frequencies that are inaudible to human ears but irritate raccoons. But most if not all lossy compression algorithms eliminate human-inaudible frequencies. So... yeah.
Not sure if it's still true, but YouTube used to only support 2.1 audio output.
In that timeframe, my compatriots were not aware of this and several of them upgraded their home theaters to 5.1 or better.
For some reason, the myriad videos on YouTube claiming to help you test your 5.1 setup never seemed to get the results they wanted ...
YouTube supports up to 5.1 now, still no 7.1.
This guy edits music into 5.1, which can be interesting. https://youtube.com/@5.1musicchannel
Does Spotify not have lossless audio? I’m pretty sure every track on Apple Music is lossless so I assumed the same was true for Spotify.
They do have lossless audio now, like since a few weeks.
Anyway, normal speakers don’t go above or below human audible frequencies.