Daft Punk - Discovery -2001- -flac- 88 | Top-Rated | FULL REVIEW |
It looks like you want a text that appears to be a detailed listing, file name, or metadata readout for the album Daft Punk - Discovery (2001) in FLAC quality, possibly with a nod to an 88 kHz sample rate (e.g., 24-bit/88.2 kHz).
Here is that text rendered as a file listing, technical spec sheet, and log-style output: Daft Punk - Discovery -2001- -FLAC- 88
Themes and Concept
- Human vs. Machine: Vocodered voices and robotic motifs play against warm, emotive songwriting, exploring the interplay of technology and feeling.
- Nostalgia & Reinvention: The album reframes disco, 70s/80s pop, and toy synth-era textures through a modern electronic lens—both homage and reinvention.
- Pop Accessibility: Discovery emphasizes concise songcraft, memorable hooks, and emotional directness, aimed at a broad audience without sacrificing studio experimentation.
Step 4 – Tagging & organization:
Use MusicBrainz Picard to tag FLAC files with correct metadata (album art, track numbers, genres).
Add custom tag: SOURCE: Qobuz 24-88.2 It looks like you want a text that
3. Understanding "88" – High-Resolution Audio
The "88" likely means 88.2 kHz sampling rate (24-bit depth). Themes and Concept
| Format | Sampling rate | Bit depth | Use case | |--------|--------------|-----------|----------| | CD standard | 44.1 kHz | 16-bit | Standard audio | | High-res | 88.2 kHz | 24-bit | Studio master, vinyl rips, upsampled | | High-res | 96 kHz | 24-bit | Common studio standard |
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Why 88.2 kHz? It’s exactly double 44.1 kHz (CD rate), making mathematical resampling easier for some DACs. Some early high-res electronic releases used 88.2 kHz.
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Is Discovery natively 88.2 kHz?
The album was produced in the late 1990s/early 2000s, likely on digital audio workstations (e.g., Pro Tools) at 44.1 kHz or 48 kHz. Any 88.2 kHz version is likely an upsample from the CD master or a vinyl rip, not a true high-res master. Daft Punk never officially released a 24/88.2 version of Discovery on major high-res stores (Qobuz, HDtracks, etc.) as of 2026.
Use spectral analysis (in Audition, Spek, or Audacity):
- Load the FLAC file, view spectrogram (log scale).
- True 88.2 kHz content should show frequencies above 22.05 kHz (Nyquist of 44.1 kHz) all the way to ~44.1 kHz.
- Upsampled CD will show a sharp cutoff at 22.05 kHz.














