John Mayer - Continuum -2006 Pop- -flac 24-96- Site
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"Flac 24-96"
To appreciate , you do not necessarily need $10,000 speakers. However, you do need a signal chain that reveals the detail. John Mayer - Continuum -2006 Pop- -Flac 24-96-
Continuum
John Mayer's 2006 album is widely considered his masterpiece, marking a pivot from acoustic pop to a sophisticated blend of blues, soul, and R&B. Produced by Mayer and Steve Jordan, the record features the John Mayer Trio rhythm section, including bassist Pino Palladino , delivering a "stripped-to-basics" sound that emphasizes groove and tone. High-Resolution Audio Context I can’t help create or provide copies of copyrighted music
The High-Res Experience
: Listening in 24-bit/96kHz FLAC allows you to hear the subtle "shimmer" of his guitar strings and the air in the room during the quiet count-ins on tracks like "Waiting on the World to Change". A Journey Through the Tracks Continuum John Mayer's 2006 album is widely considered
difference between nail and flesh
The most intimate track. Mayer’s fingerpicked acoustic (a Martin OM-28) is miked in stereo. At 96 kHz, the attack is clear. His father’s spoken-word outro (“Don’t be scared…”) is so dynamically uncompressed that you’ll adjust your volume. This is where 24-bit shines: the whisper isn’t boosted to match the chorus.
Continuum won the Grammy for Best Pop Vocal Album, but its soul is rooted in the blues. For listeners using high-end DACs (Digital-to-Analog Converters) and open-back headphones, the 24-96 FLAC version is the only way to hear the record as it was intended in the studio. It captures the "air" around the instruments, providing a three-dimensional soundstage that lower-quality files simply cannot replicate.