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It looks like you’re referencing a specific release: in FLAC format.
Tatsuro Yamashita’s OPUS ~All Time Best 1975–2012~ is a definitive retrospective of the artist often hailed as the "King of City Pop." Released in 2012, this compilation serves as a bridge between the analog mastery of the 1970s and the digital precision of the modern era. 💿 Overview of the Collection Release Date: September 26, 2012 Format Focus: High-Fidelity FLAC (Free Lossless Audio Codec) 49 tracks spanning 37 years of musical evolution Structure:
Yamashita’s voice sits in a specific frequency range that MP3 compression struggles with. The "air" around his consonants—the hiss of the 'S' and the warmth of the 'O'—dissolves in lossy formats. FLAC retains the harmonic overtones, making his vocals feel present in the room.
| Version | Pros | Cons | |---------|------|------| | | True lossless, physical backup | Requires CD player or ripping | | FLAC (this report) | Same as CD, convenient, taggable | No high-res upgrade | | Apple Music (AAC 256kbps) | Streaming convenience, good for casual | Lossy, not for archiving | | Spotify (Ogg Vorbis 320kbps) | Easy access | Lossy, variable quality depending on device | | YouTube Music (Opus 160kbps) | Free/cheap | Heavy lossy compression, poor dynamics | | Vinyl (2018 reissue) | Warm analog character, large artwork | Expensive, needs cleaning, potential surface noise |


It looks like you’re referencing a specific release: in FLAC format.
Tatsuro Yamashita’s OPUS ~All Time Best 1975–2012~ is a definitive retrospective of the artist often hailed as the "King of City Pop." Released in 2012, this compilation serves as a bridge between the analog mastery of the 1970s and the digital precision of the modern era. 💿 Overview of the Collection Release Date: September 26, 2012 Format Focus: High-Fidelity FLAC (Free Lossless Audio Codec) 49 tracks spanning 37 years of musical evolution Structure:
Yamashita’s voice sits in a specific frequency range that MP3 compression struggles with. The "air" around his consonants—the hiss of the 'S' and the warmth of the 'O'—dissolves in lossy formats. FLAC retains the harmonic overtones, making his vocals feel present in the room.
| Version | Pros | Cons | |---------|------|------| | | True lossless, physical backup | Requires CD player or ripping | | FLAC (this report) | Same as CD, convenient, taggable | No high-res upgrade | | Apple Music (AAC 256kbps) | Streaming convenience, good for casual | Lossy, not for archiving | | Spotify (Ogg Vorbis 320kbps) | Easy access | Lossy, variable quality depending on device | | YouTube Music (Opus 160kbps) | Free/cheap | Heavy lossy compression, poor dynamics | | Vinyl (2018 reissue) | Warm analog character, large artwork | Expensive, needs cleaning, potential surface noise |