I shipped my CDs to Antonio yesterday. He's trying to get something directly from the artist, so it might arrive after Christmas. I don't mind at all. Rather I appreciate the thoughtfulness.
I worked with a fellow that went to university in Sherbrooke. He lent me a copy of it. Now he and his family live in Research Triangle, NC. Not a bad place unless you are a French-Catholic family from Quebec. Then it's awfully difficult to fit in.
I've heard of overtones.
I'd feel better about this if it was peer reviewed. However, except for cymbals the overtones above 20KHZ make up very little of the instrument's sound. What I was trying to say is that I doubt many people could tell a 14-15KHZ roll-off by listening to the vast majority of music. I am curious to know which music was used to detect the roll-off.
I can't understand anybody scamming on headphone forums. It's just not enough money to make it worth it IMO. But scamming Nate is really stupid. That's really killing the goose that laid the golden egg. Insert <stupid stupid stupid> emoticon here.
What "music" are you trying to listen to at 14-15khz? Here is a musical note/frequency chart. As you can see, it goes up to a D# that is 4 octaves above middle C. The frequency of this D# is 4978.03HZ, way below 14-15kHZ.