Best Of - -flac---tfm- — Santana -

When you listen to a rip, the separation between the instruments is immense. You can feel the room ambience in the older recordings and the polished, punchy bass in the modern ones. The high frequencies of the guitar solo are not distorted (as they often are in low-bitrate MP3s), but rather warm and resonant. Conclusion: A Must-Have Collection

A fusion of Latin guitar and hip-hop beats that won a Grammy. "The Game of Love" (ft. Michelle Branch): Santana - Best Of - -FLAC---TFM-

Leo had heard a 128kbps MP3 of a cassette dub of a sixth-generation copy back in college. Even through that murk, he’d felt it: Carlos Santana’s guitar on “Black Magic Woman” didn’t just wail—it breathed . You could hear the wood of the neck creak. When you listen to a rip, the separation

: Unlike MP3s, which discard audio data to shrink file sizes, FLAC is a lossless format. It compresses the audio data without losing a single bit of information. Listening to a FLAC file means you are hearing an exact, bit-for-bit replica of the original master CD or vinyl rip. Conclusion: A Must-Have Collection A fusion of Latin

Use software that supports FLAC natively, such as Foobar2000, Audirvana, or VLC. Conclusion

Santana revolutionized rock by incorporating African and Latin polyrhythms. The distinct textures of Michael Shrieve’s crisp drums, Jose "Chepito" Areas’ timbales, and Michael Carabello’s congas require immense high-frequency clarity and transient response to sound lifelike.