The goal of modern mastering engineers is to create the hottest track possible without clipping. An interesting fact I just learned is that virtually all digital meters do not show all the possible clips since they only indicate the level of specific samples. If a clip point does not occur exactly on a sample point, but between two sample points, it will not indicate. As a result, the meter can look good, but clipping can occur. If the song was mixed by an inexperienced mixer, it’s even more likely this might occur.
In a professional studio, monitoring with oversampling reconstruction filters (the circuits that recreate the audio waveform from the samples) these clips are not heard. However, when the song hits a consumer CD or DVD player it can sound distorted because its playback circuitry can’t handle the clips. The same effect would happen when you make a mp3 from a track with clipping. Perhaps that’s what’s going on. Of course, it could also be a case of a lousy encode.
John
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