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Direct Link To This Post Topic: the importance of analog sound in prog
    Posted: November 25 2014 at 19:17
I'm gonna say one thing. I cannot live without my DAC (Digital Analog Converter.) especially for headphone listening.

It is an essential part of my music listening experience. Can't be out of the equation of my sound chain or it all goes to sh*t. Lol.
Gimmie my headphones now!!! 🎧🤣
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: November 24 2014 at 20:08
Originally posted by ProgShine ProgShine wrote:

Is this the same Jimmy Page that DIDN'T use the original master tapes but the digital remastered versions for the new Led Zeppelin Vinyl re-issues??? 

Well, didn't Steven Wilson explain this, rather lucidly, to you all:

The Creator has a master tape
But He left it in the cab 

Case closed Tongue
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: November 24 2014 at 19:33
I think it's a different Jimmy Page... the one that said he is DONE with hardrives.

Don't you trust Jimmy?
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: November 24 2014 at 05:03
Originally posted by Surrealist Surrealist wrote:


Jimmy Page on Vinyl and why he's done with hardrives.

http://www.tubechop.com/watch/4188750

Is this the same Jimmy Page that DIDN'T use the original master tapes but the digital remastered versions for the new Led Zeppelin Vinyl re-issues???
https://progshinerecords.bandcamp.com



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Direct Link To This Post Posted: November 24 2014 at 02:38

Jimmy Page on Vinyl and why he's done with hardrives.

http://www.tubechop.com/watch/4188750
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: October 30 2013 at 09:30
Originally posted by moshkito moshkito wrote:

Originally posted by Dean Dean wrote:

LOL yup - I had to replace my copies of Dark Side of the Moon, Tubular Bells and Seventh Wave's Things To Come when I bought my first "good" turntable.
 
Gosh ... let's see ... 4 copies of Amon Duul 2's Wolf City, 2 copies of Can's Ege Bamyasi, 2 copies of Klaus Schulze's Mirage, 3 copies of Tangerine Dream's Phaedra, 2 copies of Stackridge's Mr Mick, 3 copies of Gong's You, probably 4 copies of Close to the Edge, and at least 2 copies of Atom Heart Mother, and ... 2 copies of "Live on Blueberry Hill" by Led Zeppelin ... the best  bootleg I have ever heard in my life. Lastly, 2 copies of at least one of the original Raving and Drooling/Gotta Be Crazy, that was delayed by you know who. And all this was with a very nice Pioneer turntable and a Stanton Cartridge that lasted 30 years after it cost me $300 dollars in 1978!
 
Probably more albums, too! I even came to dislike the CD version of Wolf City, with the song order backwards. Somehow, Side 2 at the front, did not sound as nice and fine as the album ever did! I thought the transition from Side 1 to Side 2 was perfect! And in the CD it didn't work backwards!
Jon and Vangelis - The Friend Of Mr Cairo has the same mess on CD. Backward it doesn't work much.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: October 30 2013 at 08:51
Originally posted by Dean Dean wrote:

LOL yup - I had to replace my copies of Dark Side of the Moon, Tubular Bells and Seventh Wave's Things To Come when I bought my first "good" turntable.
 
Gosh ... let's see ... 4 copies of Amon Duul 2's Wolf City, 2 copies of Can's Ege Bamyasi, 2 copies of Klaus Schulze's Mirage, 3 copies of Tangerine Dream's Phaedra, 2 copies of Stackridge's Mr Mick, 3 copies of Gong's You, probably 4 copies of Close to the Edge, and at least 2 copies of Atom Heart Mother, and ... 2 copies of "Live on Blueberry Hill" by Led Zeppelin ... the best  bootleg I have ever heard in my life. Lastly, 2 copies of at least one of the original Raving and Drooling/Gotta Be Crazy, that was delayed by you know who. And all this was with a very nice Pioneer turntable and a Stanton Cartridge that lasted 30 years after it cost me $300 dollars in 1978!
 
Probably more albums, too! I even came to dislike the CD version of Wolf City, with the song order backwards. Somehow, Side 2 at the front, did not sound as nice and fine as the album ever did! I thought the transition from Side 1 to Side 2 was perfect! And in the CD it didn't work backwards!


Edited by moshkito - October 30 2013 at 09:08
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: October 30 2013 at 07:42
Now that you mention it, they do appear to be a couple - only not reallyLOL
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: October 30 2013 at 07:31
I like the body language between the bloke and the girl, who is clearly more interested in her ale than his album collection.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: October 30 2013 at 05:05
LOL
Wow talk about devotion!!! 
Makes me feel rather content and happy about my Ipod tbhBig smile 
I used to carry around a big ruck-sag every time I had to leave the house. I filled it up with cds engulfed in some towels in order to offer up some protection for them. Good times, but also very unhandy times - and remember this was a digital media. 
This is probably why I've had to re-purchase so many of my cds. I'm currently on my 5th Dark Side Of The Moon.
Anyway, I suspect this bloke'll run into some of the same problems as I did - especially if he plans on attending parties with his little sonic set-upLOL 
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: October 30 2013 at 04:55
This guy listening to records at a bar in London:
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: October 25 2013 at 03:48
Originally posted by Catcher10 Catcher10 wrote:


Yes listening to music is subjective..I said that already no need for the ? mark Confused.
The question was rhetorical (was it not?) In stating that rhetorically I was agreeing with you so there is no point in agreeing with me agreeing with you.

Originally posted by Catcher10 Catcher10 wrote:

We have a 70yr old arthritic (in both hands) female friend of the family, retired math teacher. She quilts, needle points (by hand) some of the most amazing blankets and throws I have ever seen.
 
I bet your mother-in-law would win....
Let's see how she gets on in 12 years time. My mother-in-law cannot drive stick and in the time it would take her to get into my coupé Wiggo would be queuing at the check-out to pay, you would lose your bet.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: October 25 2013 at 02:43
Originally posted by Dean Dean wrote:

 
Listening to music is subjective, we all agree on that (don't we?) - the equipment and technology we use to do that is not: a particular sound either comes out of the left speaker channel or it does not - there is nothing subjective about that; a spectral response is flat or it isn't - there is nothing subjective about that; a recording medium can record a 120dB dynamic range or it cannot - there is nothing subjective about that... etc. etc. ad infinitum, ad nauseam, ab initio, ab aeterno. My stick-shift V6 Tiburon is faster than my vintage Holdsworth racing bicycle - a bold claim but one I'm sure most would agree with, but if I give my bike to Bradley Wiggins and my car keys to my 82 yearold arthritic Mother-in-law guess who gets to the shops first - the observed subjective claim would be that the bike is faster - even though the specifiations say otherwise. When we blur the line between objective and subjective we are being disingenuous and that's not good - objectively if System A is equal to System B but subjectively I prefer System B - that does not make System B better than System A.
 
Yes listening to music is subjective..I said that already no need for the ? mark Confused. We have a 70yr old arthritic (in both hands) female friend of the family, retired math teacher. She quilts, needle points (by hand) some of the most amazing blankets and throws I have ever seen.
 
I bet your mother-in-law would win....
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: October 24 2013 at 19:32
Originally posted by Hercules Hercules wrote:

Originally posted by Dean Dean wrote:

What you are talking about there is interpretation of data. With a star the information we gather is based upon the effect of the properties of the star on other things - we cannot physically measure its mass, we base our calculations on the measurements we obtain from the effect that mass has on some other measurable property.
 
Not so. You can measure the mass of a star by using the Hertzsprung-Russell diagram based on its spectral class and luminosity, not by its mass effect on anything. 
I presumed that spectral class & luminosity was an effect of the property of mass on how fusion occurs. We are measuring two properties - colour temperature and brightness - that are a function of the mass, we are not measuring the mass directly (except in the constellation of Libra of course Wink).
Originally posted by Hercules Hercules wrote:


And you are probably correct in that the stars have achieved their high mass by stellar mergers, but the classical model said that they should then either rapidly disintegrate as a pair instability supernova if of low metallicity or a core collapse hypernova if not. The fact that some have done neither and have survived  for a considerable time required a new model. And yes, some have probably shed 20% of their initial mass - but they should not have been around long enough to do this,
I made a quick "engineering" guess extrapolated from the information you provided in your example - I don't know how quickly these things occur on a cosmological timescale, or whether there is a tipping-point for instability when two or more stars merge, or when the distinction between a binary pair and a merged pair is made, or some other factor I've not thought of (erm.. magnetic field interaction affecting the orbits?). However, this is a digression, albeit a very interesting one (for me).
Originally posted by Hercules Hercules wrote:

You say you can't "measure" soundstaging - but my ears can observe it even if they can't record it. The fact that we can't explain the difference between my (and others) perception of vinyl and CDs is perfectly acceptable evidence to deduce that we don't fully understand the physics of sound reproduction and sound perception.
The point is two different sets of isolated observers will interpret it differently and so it lacks repeatability. In your star mass example two different observers will agree and so the observations will be repeatable, which is reason enough to suspect the model is in need of refinement - that is how science works is it not.
 
We understand the physics of sound reproduction and perception well enough - sound-bars and other pseudo-surround sound systems use this science to recreate a localised 3D image from a 2D source even if the level of processing required is pretty heavy and not always satisfactory - in most systems if you move out of the sweet-spot the illusion is lost. As you noted early on in this little exchange - it is the illusion of a 3D soundstage that is being (re)produced in a stereo image. I think we can (and have) explained the differences in perception sufficiently since perception, by definition, is a neurological interpretation rather than a purely acoustic phenomenon.


Edited by Dean - October 24 2013 at 19:33
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: October 24 2013 at 18:34
[QUOTE=Dean]
What you are talking about there is interpretation of data. With a star the information we gather is based upon the effect of the properties of the star on other things - we cannot physically measure its mass, we base our calculations on the measurements we obtain from the effect that mass has on some other measurable property.
QUOTE]

Not so. You can measure the mass of a star by using the Hertzsprung-Russell diagram based on its spectral class and luminosity, not by its mass effect on anything. 

And you are probably correct in that the stars have achieved their high mass by stellar mergers, but the classical model said that they should then either rapidly disintegrate as a pair instability supernova if of low metallicity or a core collapse hypernova if not. The fact that some have done neither and have survived  for a considerable time required a new model. And yes, some have probably shed 20% of their initial mass - but they should not have been around long enough to do this,

You say you can't "measure" soundstaging - but my ears can observe it even if they can't record it. The fact that we can't explain the difference between my (and others) perception of vinyl and CDs is perfectly acceptable evidence to deduce that we don't fully understand the physics of sound reproduction and sound perception.



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Direct Link To This Post Posted: October 24 2013 at 18:10
Originally posted by Catcher10 Catcher10 wrote:

Originally posted by Dean Dean wrote:

Originally posted by Catcher10 Catcher10 wrote:

So part of my point is that objective science says we should all be listening to the Beatles, Michael Jackson and Celine Dion as a huge portion of our music catalog.....but with our subjective music minds, I don't think many if not any of us do.
What scientific reasoning is this based upon? Real science has nothing to say about what type of music anyone should listen to.
 
 
sheesh.
 
Exactly...the correlation that science or electronic specs dictate that one thing is better than the other is not always right. There are too many variables that create a different outcome.
 
Wacko What?  I seriously do not understand what you are talking about anymore. This is not "exactly" at all. It is not the point you were making. No objective science would ever say we should all listen to the Beatles, Michael Jackson and Celine Dion. There is no objectiveness in any of that, nor can there ever be.
 
I repeat
 
sheesh.
 
 
 
 
Yet, we continue to agree, even if I don't "agree with" the arugment you put forward to agree with me... Confused
Originally posted by Catcher10 Catcher10 wrote:

For whatever reason you want to cite...more and more people want a different sound than a digital sound. I have said before, more and more younger people, of the age that did not grow up in the LP era are going to vinyl.....In my miniscule world of vinyl stores each store owner says the same thing....The patrons are getting younger and more of them. Hey!! I don't like that because they are buying up stuff I want also LOL.
 
Almost every turntable mfg has seen double and triple digit growth and shipments in the last 5-10yrs, more and more audio mfg are expanding offerings in the vinyl gear end, more cartridges, phono amps and accessories. In todays digital world there can be only one reason for this....its in high demand. You can see more and more vinyl pressing plants that are busy, heck even WSJ has done article on some of this growth. Albums have gone from $20 to $30...used vinyl has gone from $2-3 to $8-10......Demand is the #1 driver for higher prices.
 
Look I am pretty well fine with everything in this loooooooong thread, and the content is the same on any other music, hi-fi website on the internet, all the discussions are the same. They start the same and end the same.....some like this and some like that, there is no right or wrong answer, and yes there is a lot of mis information going on in all the threads.
 
Music and how we listen to it is subjective....Happy trails! Big smile
No one is denying any of this. I am not interested in any of it. If people prefer wax cylinder over pianola rolls that's fine by me - good for them - whooop-di-flipping-do. I've said before in this thread I own a lot of vinyl, I even still buy vinyl, and like you I also buy CDs by the bucket load - what my subjective preferences are is irrelevant and frankly, meaningless. Stating that analogue is having a revival is irrelevant to everything I have written in this thread, stating that digital is better than analogue or analogue is better than digital is also irrelevant to everything I have ever written in this thread.
 
However, as you say there is a lot of mis-information going on in all the threads: people make unsubstantiated objective claims about one technology over another in "defence" of their subjective preference choices and that is wrong. That is all I address here. Someone makes a bold objective claim that is unsubstantiated and I will ask questions and offer likely explanations. It just happens that there have been many more "opinion as fact" claims made for analogue than digital.
 
Listening to music is subjective, we all agree on that (don't we?) - the equipment and technology we use to do that is not: a particular sound either comes out of the left speaker channel or it does not - there is nothing subjective about that; a spectral response is flat or it isn't - there is nothing subjective about that; a recording medium can record a 120dB dynamic range or it cannot - there is nothing subjective about that... etc. etc. ad infinitum, ad nauseam, ab initio, ab aeterno. My stick-shift V6 Tiburon is faster than my vintage Holdsworth racing bicycle - a bold claim but one I'm sure most would agree with, but if I give my bike to Bradley Wiggins and my car keys to my 82 yearold arthritic Mother-in-law guess who gets to the shops first - the observed subjective claim would be that the bike is faster - even though the specifiations say otherwise. When we blur the line between objective and subjective we are being disingenuous and that's not good - objectively if System A is equal to System B but subjectively I prefer System B - that does not make System B better than System A.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: October 24 2013 at 17:15
Originally posted by Catcher10 Catcher10 wrote:

 Albums have gone from $20 to $30...used vinyl has gone from $2-3 to $8-10......Demand is the #1 driver for higher prices. 

I guess I should have waited until 2013 to unload my vinyl instead of taking $0.50 an album in 1990 LOL


Edited by The.Crimson.King - October 24 2013 at 17:15
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: October 24 2013 at 16:59
Originally posted by Dean Dean wrote:

Originally posted by Catcher10 Catcher10 wrote:

So part of my point is that objective science says we should all be listening to the Beatles, Michael Jackson and Celine Dion as a huge portion of our music catalog.....but with our subjective music minds, I don't think many if not any of us do.
What scientific reasoning is this based upon? Real science has nothing to say about what type of music anyone should listen to.
 
 
sheesh.
 
Exactly...the correlation that science or electronic specs dictate that one thing is better than the other is not always right. There are too many variables that create a different outcome.
 
For whatever reason you want to cite...more and more people want a different sound than a digital sound. I have said before, more and more younger people, of the age that did not grow up in the LP era are going to vinyl.....In my miniscule world of vinyl stores each store owner says the same thing....The patrons are getting younger and more of them. Hey!! I don't like that because they are buying up stuff I want also LOL.
 
Almost every turntable mfg has seen double and triple digit growth and shipments in the last 5-10yrs, more and more audio mfg are expanding offerings in the vinyl gear end, more cartridges, phono amps and accessories. In todays digital world there can be only one reason for this....its in high demand. You can see more and more vinyl pressing plants that are busy, heck even WSJ has done article on some of this growth. Albums have gone from $20 to $30...used vinyl has gone from $2-3 to $8-10......Demand is the #1 driver for higher prices.
 
Look I am pretty well fine with everything in this loooooooong thread, and the content is the same on any other music, hi-fi website on the internet, all the discussions are the same. They start the same and end the same.....some like this and some like that, there is no right or wrong answer, and yes there is a lot of mis information going on in all the threads.
 
Music and how we listen to it is subjective....Happy trails! Big smile
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: October 24 2013 at 12:40
Originally posted by Catcher10 Catcher10 wrote:

So part of my point is that objective science says we should all be listening to the Beatles, Michael Jackson and Celine Dion as a huge portion of our music catalog.....but with our subjective music minds, I don't think many if not any of us do.
What scientific reasoning is this based upon? Real science has nothing to say about what type of music anyone should listen to.
 
 
sheesh.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: October 24 2013 at 11:42
So much, if not all, of music and what is related to music is subjective...I hate to say 100% subjective because I am not a person that likes to feel all or nothing. But lets look at music, not everyone likes everyone elses music. Just this website proves that case.
I don't like the Beatles, never have and own one album that my wife bought for me at an antique store, the blue album and I have spun it once...There has never been anything interesting to me about the Beatles. The history, popularity, sales volume, inspiration value, these Beatles science "specs" if you will point that I should like the Beatles..but I don't. As good as the populus says they are, I don't like them.
 
As good as digital specs say it is, as good as CD specs say it is......its not my prefered method of listening to music. If digital music went away it would have no bearing on my enjoyment of music, I would not miss it. Specifications in audio gear do not mean much to me, its subjective because its what your ears hear that counts, if it was all based on specs we would all own the "best" gear out there and not listen on computers, iPods, smartphones or earbuds....ya right!! Another subjective topic of loooooooong debate.
 
So part of my point is that objective science says we should all be listening to the Beatles, Michael Jackson and Celine Dion as a huge portion of our music catalog.....but with our subjective music minds, I don't think many if not any of us do.
 
Please enjoy your music however you want, on whatever gear you want...to me that is the key.
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