Pictures -2015- -flac 24-192-: Rush - Moving
“No,” Maria said. “You’re filtering out the harmonic overtones that help your brain reconstruct transient attacks. Cymbals live in the 5 kHz–30 kHz range for overtones. A steep filter at 20 kHz doesn’t just remove inaudible frequencies—it causes phase smearing right down into the audible highs. Your hi-hats arrive late and blurred.”
“Look,” she said. “Your DAC is set to a 192 kHz internal sample rate. But your FLAC file is true 24/192. That’s fine. But your playback software’s low-pass filter is set to ‘Sharp’ — and it’s set to cut everything above 20 kHz before your DAC sees it.” Rush - Moving Pictures -2015- -FLAC 24-192-
A young audiophile named Alex finally got his dream setup: a reference DAC, planar magnetic headphones, and a copy of Rush’s Moving Pictures in 24-bit/192 kHz FLAC from the 2015 remaster. He’d read that this release captured the full analog master’s transient response. “No,” Maria said
A 24/192 FLAC is only as good as your DAC’s reconstruction filter. Many default filters cut ultrasonic content too aggressively, damaging transient response in the audible range. When working with high-rate files (192 kHz), use a slow roll-off or minimum phase filter if available. Don’t just look at bit depth—listen to the filter’s time-domain behavior. Rush’s Moving Pictures isn’t about hearing up to 96 kHz; it’s about preserving the timing of Neil Peart’s cymbals so they hit like real bronze, not like distant paper. A steep filter at 20 kHz doesn’t just