
- #Tidal vs spotify vs apple music sound quality upgrade#
- #Tidal vs spotify vs apple music sound quality software#
It‘s close to Spotify’s usability while rivaling Qobuz and Tidal on audio quality.
#Tidal vs spotify vs apple music sound quality upgrade#
#Tidal vs spotify vs apple music sound quality software#
Contender(s)ĭeezer is the main contender for Qobuz, offering lossless tracks (“CD quality is enough for everyone”) but with a very complete catalog, better software (e.g. Even in the App pressing the space bar doesn’t pause the music (!) and I have to manually click the pause button to pause it. It still doesn’t respond consistently to the systems play/pause button.

It used to be a bit unresponsive, but that that’s much improved recently. The Qobuz desktop app has the option to select an output device. It even manages to have particular songs missing from an album, which the Qobuz app will play for 2 seconds and then abruptly skip to the next track 🤬 If Qobuz doesn’t solve the catalog issues I will move to another service once my subscription ends.

Sometimes it’s missing specific albums and some artists are not present at all. The real pain point for Qobuz are the holes in their catalog.

On a yearly plan, you can get this extreme level of sound quality for just €15 a month, which beats Tidal on price and quality. Qobuz puts classical music front and center, but it has a wide range of other genres. That’s 190 megabytes of compressed data for a 5-minute song! Qobuz is the service for high res music, currently the only mainstream service offering true lossless music up to a baffling 24 bits at 192kHz. A reason to stick with Tidal is mostly the ‘brand’ and their higher fees for artists and they also offer some unique content like interviews and concerts. Deezer is Tidal’s main rival though: Deezer has a bigger catalogue and better software for less. Qobuz competes with Tidal on absolute music quality, which Qobuz wins. An audiophile should probably look elsewhere. MQA is something the artists, hardware manufacturers, and consumers are all paying for, but are apparently not benefiting from. It’s been recently proven to be lossy and question marks have been raised on what it’s doing to the original audio.
