Stereogum Home

 

March 7, 2007

The First Perfected MP3 In History's Opening Lyric: "Doo"

In Business Week's profile of Karlheinz Brandenburg (often cited as the inventor of the MP3) the mag traces the history and development of Microsoft's favorite audio file format and reveals that the reproduction of Suzanne Vega's deviously simple "Tom's Diner" was the litmus test for the technology's success. (via slashdot.org)

Brandenburg's involvement in digital music compression began in the early 1980s when he was a doctoral student at Germany's University of Erlangen-Nuremberg. A professor urged Brandenburg to work on the problem of how to transmit music over a digital ISDN phone line. It wasn't just a computer coding problem. Brandenburg had to immerse himself in the science behind how people perceive music.

That was where Suzanne Vega came in.

Her song "Tom's Diner," though seemingly a simple ditty, proved devilishly difficult to reproduce without annoying background noise. "Suzanne Vega was a catastrophe. Terrible distortion," Brandenburg recalls. "The a cappella version of Tom's Diner was more difficult to compress without compromising on audio quality than anything else."

When MP3 developers refined the technology to the point where "Tom's Diner" sounded true to the original, they had made a major breakthrough. "I've listened to this 20 seconds [of Tom's Diner] a thousand times. I still like the music," says Brandenburg, who met Vega years later when both attended an event in Cannes to mark the creation of MP3.

Interesting! Don't know much about sound and engineering, but reproducing "Tom's Diner" couldn't have been that difficult. Right? Pretty sure this was an elaborate Brandenburg come-on attempt. And who can blame him? She can even make an apple look sexy. On a related note, did anyone catch "Blood Makes Noise" on The Sarah Silverman Program the other week? It was when Sarah gets an AIDS test. Anyway, file this one away for your next Jeopardy! night.

Posted at 9:30 AM
Tags:




6 Comments

I think I heard this story somewhere before. I still like the song too.

Posted by: Nate at 03/07/07 12:37 PM  | Reply
Score = 0 Vote up Vote down

Um... Would I be a dick if I pointed out that opening lyric of "Tom's Diner" is "I am sitting, in the morning..."?

Posted by: Jack Fear at 03/07/07 12:48 PM  | Reply
Score = 0 Vote up Vote down

I just ate pancakes at Tom's Diner last weekend. And now this! Synchronicity!

Posted by: Justin at 03/07/07 1:04 PM  | Reply
Score = 0 Vote up Vote down

jack fear, i figured this was a reference to the a cappella version Brandenburg says he was using.

Posted by: jim at 03/07/07 5:18 PM  | Reply
Score = 0 Vote up Vote down

Yeah, Jim, I've got that. The original, a cappella version of "Tom's Diner," track #1 on Solitude Standing, begins with a soft intake of breath, then the words "I am sitting, in the morning, at the diner on the corner..."

It's only that gawdawful DNA remake/remix that loops the "doo doo doo doo" bit into a chorus.

Posted by: Jack Fear at 03/07/07 5:57 PM  | Reply
Score = 0 Vote up Vote down

Don't know much about sound and engineering, but reproducing "Tom's Diner" couldn't have been that difficult. Right?

The reason why a quieter, a cappella song like "Tom's Diner" might be a good test for an audio compression method is because it will be easier to hear/identify any distortion or "artifacts" that occur via the process. Think about it: if you are testing out a new compression method on a song that already has a noisy, dense mix, it will be considerably harder to isolate compression artifacts (sounds that were NOT in the original mix that appeared after the compression) from the existing noise in a really busy mix.

Of course, once you've managed to reproduce a less complex song accurately, it would probably be a good idea to proceed to testing the compression method on a denser track.

Posted by: Joey Headset at 03/07/07 7:25 PM  | Reply
Score = 0 Vote up Vote down

Leave a comment


Staff

  • Founder/Editor-In-Chief: Scott Lapatine
  • Executive Editor: Amrit Singh
  • Senior Writer: Brandon Stosuy

Info

Contact

Get Flash to see our mp3 player. Here are our mp3s: Jonathan Boulet - A Community Service Announcement (The Album Leaf Remix) (»)
El Guincho - Antillas (XXXchange remix) (»)
El Guincho - Antillas (»)
Wolf People - October Fires (»)
Fan Death - Cannibal (»)
Fan Death - Reunited (CCENTURIESS Remix) (»)
Chll Pll - Dick Moves (»)
Chll Pll - Pass Out (»)
Beck - Harry Partch (»)
Tim Cohen - Haunted Hymns (»)
Tim Cohen - Take Aim Goliath (»)
Ducktails - Sandglider (»)
tUnE-YaRdS - Hatari (Drunkenmonkey Remix) (»)
tUnE-YaRdS - Hatari (Karn Remix) (»)
Beach House - Norway (»)
The Golden Filter - Thunderbird (»)
Crystal Antlers - It's All Over Now, Baby Blue (Bob Dylan Cover) (»)
CFCF - How Bizarre (OMC Cover) (»)
The Acorn - Strange Animal (Gowan Cover) (»)
Black Tambourine - Black Car (»)
Boyracer - Sunshine And Violence (»)
Henry's Dress - 1620 (»)
Honeybunch - Mine Your Own Business (»)
Lilys - Claire Hates Me (»)
Lilys - February Fourteenth (»)
Lorelei - Today's Shrug (»)
Sleepyhead - Different Colored Letters (»)
Small Factory - Merry-Go-Round (»)
Swirlies - Sarah Sitting (»)
The Ropers - Waiting (»)
Velocity Girl - My Forgotten Favorite (»)
Monsters Of Folk - Say Please (»)
Rain Machine - Give Blood (»)
Wetdog - Tidy Up Your Bedroom (»)
Beck - Little Hands (Feat. Feist, Wilco And Jamie Lidell) (»)
Brendan Benson - Feel Like Taking You Home (»)
Yeasayer - Ambling Alp (Memory Tapes Remix) (»)
Solange - Stillness Is The Move (Dirty Projectors Cover) (»)
Pearl Harbor - California Shakedown (»)
LoneLady - Immaterial (»)
Andrew Cedermark - Hard Livin' (»)
Family Portrait - Super Cool (»)
The Soft Pack - Answer To Yourself (»)
Bear In Heaven - Dust Cloud (»)
Bear In Heaven - Lovesick Teenagers (»)
Atlas Sound - Doctor (Five Discs Cover) (»)
Atlas Sound - The Screens (»)
Cloud Nothings - Hey Cool Kid (»)
The Mary Onettes - Dare (»)
The Mary Onettes - Puzzles (»)
Digital Leather - Photo Lie (»)
Memory Tapes - Easy Pert Mom (»)
Memory Tapes - Graphics (Sci-Fi Edit) (»)

Progress Report logo
Commercial Appeal logo
Premature Evaluation logo
Band to Watch logo
Quit Your Day Job logo
The Outsiders logo
The 'Gum Drop logo