Amazon Music HD & New Echo Studio Smart Speaker to Support Dolby Atmos-Encoded Music

Dolby has announced that Dolby Atmos-encoded music is now supported on the Amazon Music HD subscription streaming tier announced last week and the $200 Echo Studio smart speaker Amazon plans to ship later this year.

Until now the Dolby Atmos object-based surround-sound format has been used primarily to add dimension, including a sense of height, to movie soundtracks.

Dolby described Atmos as a tool artists can use to give music more space and deliver a more emotional listening experience. “Dolby Atmos music is a new experience for artists and fans,” explained Dolby president Todd Pendleton. “It opens a new creative palette for musicians to experiment and express themselves with their recordings.”

In a press statement, the company further described Atmos music as a “way to connect with music at its fullest capacity and creative potential — not the way most people hear music today, but a version that pulls you into a song to reveal what was lost with traditional recordings…to discover hidden details and subtleties with unparalleled clarity.”

Grammy Award winning singer/songwriter Alicia Keys, who recently hosted the unveiling of a “visual sonic installation” for her new single “Show Me Love” and performed live at Dolby SoHo a new “experiential space” in New York City’s SoHo district, had this to say about music encoded in the immersive sound format:

“Dolby Atmos is a new creative medium and art form that allows me to completely immerse my fans and transport them inside my music. When I first heard it, I was stunned! I’ve never heard music sound like that before! This is the ideal way to listen to music. It’s like hearing my music for the first time.”

Dolby worked with Amazon to create a music listening experience for its Echo Studio smart speaker that “pushes past the boundaries of the mono and stereo solutions found in most smart speakers today.”

Amazon says the Echo Studio, which will sell for $200 when it ships in early November, is the best sounding speaker in its Alexa-enabled Echo series. The compact speaker, which bears an uncanny resemblance to Apple’s HomePod, was engineered to deliver an “immersive, three-dimensional audio experience with Dolby Atmos.” It houses a 24-bit digital-to-analog converter (DAC), 330-watt (peak power) amplifier, and five drivers — a 1 inch tweeter, three 2-inch midranges, and a down-firing 5.25-inch woofer — in an 8-inch-tall cylindrical enclosure.

One or two Echo Studio devices can be paired with Amazon’s Fire TV Stick 4K or Fire TV Cube for multichannel playback in Dolby Atmos or Dolby Audio 5.1. The speaker also supports Bluetooth streaming and has a built-in Zigbee smart home hub that can be used to control compatible smart home devices.

The speaker is built for lossless music playback through Amazon Music HD and users can sample 3D music by simply saying, “Alexa, play the best of 3D music.” In addition to supporting Dolby Atmos, the speaker also incorporates Sony’s 360 Reality Audio processing. Amazon said immersive music will also be available through Tidal HiFi in 2020.

Dolby said it’s working with artists, mixers, producers, and record labels to expand the catalog of music available in Dolby Atmos. In May, Universal Music Group (UMG) announced plans to release “thousands of new songs, current hits, and legendary tracks” in Dolby Atmos from Bastille, The Beatles, Billie Eilish, Elton John, Lady Gaga, Luciano Pavarotti, Marvin Gaye, The Weeknd, and other top-tier artists across multiple genres. No specific titles or release schedule were announced.

For more information on Dolby Atmos and music, visit soho.dolby.com.

Related:

Atmos Remix of 'Kind of Blue’ to Premiere in Munich

COMMENTS
johnnydeagle's picture

A pair of Amazon's Echo Studio speakers for $400, might outperform soundbars costing substantially more. Looking forward to reading reviews of the speaker, especially two of them set up as a stereo pair, and playing something in Dolby Atmos.

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