
Spectro is a freeware audio file analyzer for windows. Currently capable of reading FLAC, APE, MP3 and WAV files. Spectro lets you view vital data about compressed audio files and creates a spectrogram of the wave data. This allows you to quickly and easily spot quality issues with a file and also look for transcodes.
Spectro will soon support an automatic transcode detection feature and will be able to scan your music library for suspect files.
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The latest version of Spectro is 1.0.93
This version fully supports 16 and 24 bit audio files (up to 192KHz sample rate), has a frequency cutoff indicator and can read pertinent metadata from compressed files.
At this point it should be very stable and well rounded.
You can download the latest version here. Feedback is always welcome.
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Features coming soon
WavPack support is being finalized
Better zooming of spectrogram, scaling
Reduced memory overhead
Transcode detection
Scanning of multiple files
Saving spectrogram to PNG/GIF
Lots more ideas in the pipeline...
I got 2 set of FLACs and a MP3
1 FLAC is a vinyl rip (first stored as 24-bit WAV and then compressed to a 24-bit FLAC)
1 FLAC that's a 'remaster' (based on the labelowner's words)
and
1 MP3 that goes up to 22khz.
First example is my vinyl rip. This one (with more from the same artists) have most likely used a cutoff filter some kind, as most of these vinyls predates the wider use of MP3.
Second example is from a remaster bundle that was sold in wav format, but clearly contains mp3 compression artifacts. FTF detects this as alright because there isn't a clear cut off because the remasters ups the ante on the artifacts (even though visible there is a clear cut-off)
Third and last example is a MP3 from a label where quite a lot of the mp3's are filling the spectrum with no clear compression artifacts. If I were to trans-code this to a FLAC, I doubt FTF would know it was from a MP3... which it didn't, as it said the file wasn't fake (when I clearly trans-coded it from a MP3!)
Note: I am using Foobar2k to see if a file is really fake or not, as it's the only tool I have compared to spek and FTF that actually shows mp3 artifacts at higher freq.