Type O Negative - Discography 1991 - 2007 -flac... -
That is a solid find. For a band as atmospheric and "thick" sounding as Type O Negative, FLAC is definitely the way to go—you really want that lossless quality to capture Peter Steele’s low-end vocals and those fuzzy, gothic industrial layers [1, 2].
FLAC Insight: The high-hat work in "Nettie" is intricate. The FLAC encoding reveals the stereo separation between the left-guitar and right-guitar harmonies—a detail often smeared in AAC/MP3. Type O Negative - Discography 1991 - 2007 -FLAC...
FLAC Note: This is the most important album to have in lossless quality. The low end on "Everything Dies" is punishing. A FLAC rip allows your subwoofer to articulate the difference between the kick drum and the bass synth. Also, the hidden track (the cover of "Paranoid" by Black Sabbath) has a vinyl crackle that is preserved beautifully. That is a solid find
Features a more upbeat, "poppier" sound on tracks like "I Don't Wanna Be Me". 2007 Dead Again The FLAC encoding reveals the stereo separation between
Ultra-Low Bass: Peter Steele played a bass tuned down to B-standard. Lossless audio prevents distortion in these sub-bass frequencies.