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MikeEnRegalia View Drop Down
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: October 25 2006 at 09:24
I think that for these vinyl reissues the engineers give the audiophiles exactly what they want to hear ... the odd thing is that this would change the original signal, something which audiophiles don't (or at least: should not) want. I thought that mastering should be about recording the original signal with as little changes as possible, not to make it sound warmer (read: add harmonic distortion).Wink

The best reasons for me to buy vinyl remain: nostalgia + cover art/vinyl art (picture discs, colored/transparent vinyls).Big smile


Edited by MikeEnRegalia - October 25 2006 at 09:26
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oliverstoned View Drop Down
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: October 25 2006 at 09:51
Talking about changing the original signal, most, if not all "rock" Cds(and many jazz records as well) are so over-bumped that the atrocious low is unintelligible to the point that you can't ear the bass line, so there's no comparison in term of fidelity between this and the original vynil. You can talk about a so-called warmth, i refer to extreme coldness, dryness, a edgy, lifeless and boring sound that break the ears until 5 minutes. But now you can serve me your mathematical formulas and theories to prove your point. The listening experience is something else.
    

Edited by oliverstoned - October 25 2006 at 09:51
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MikeEnRegalia View Drop Down
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: October 25 2006 at 09:55
LOL I certainly won't use formulas to prove any point that is about subjective listening experience. I would only challenge some specific statements like "you can't hear the bass" - I can hear it on CDs, so while I know what you mean I would carefully speculate that you have a tendency to exaggerate.Embarrassed
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: October 25 2006 at 10:03

If the difference between a vague buzzing and a deep powerful and clear bassline is not so important, OK so.
The low is far more articulate, quick, dry and deep on vynil than on CD. If (very rare)good Cds records manage to have decent "soft" highs (without comparison in term of tone and informations with the vynil), these Cds all have a problem with the low which is very thin on the old release and overbumped on most recent versions. However, these overbumped releases goes well with Mr everybody
mediocre system. They are done for it. Thats why i should
cut my sub when i'm listening to thse kinds of CDs, whereas it works wonderful with my sub on a well- balanced classical or jazz Cd. So it proves the problem is on the (overbumped)CD .
    

Edited by oliverstoned - October 25 2006 at 10:08
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MikeEnRegalia View Drop Down
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: October 25 2006 at 10:14
Originally posted by oliverstoned oliverstoned wrote:


However, these overbumped releases goes well with Mr everybody
mediocre system. They are done for it.
    


I sure hope so ... I'd loose my interest in music as soon as I need ultra expensive gear to listen to it. And I pity those who think that you can only enjoy music on audiophile equipment - you're free to pursue that course, I steer clear.Wink


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oliverstoned View Drop Down
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: October 25 2006 at 10:34
I've never pretend that you can't apreciate music through
mediocre equipement. There's always better but as soon as you've heard something good, it's very hard to go backward.

I don't talk about ultra expensive gear, you can already judge the difference between records on a good 1000€ system.
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N Ellingworth View Drop Down
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: October 25 2006 at 10:46
I wouldn't touch audiophile equipment with a barge pole it all seems to be made of fairy dust. I can understand the reasons behind keeping each part separate as it makes it easier to figure out which bit is faulty and you don't have to replace everything at once but spending over £500 on a hi-fi seems pointless to me.

I wonder how audiophiles feel about the equipment musicians use to make music?

Take electric guitars for example: the wire inside them is copper, the jack socket is usually nickel, most of the effects used are digital, and the amps are mostly very low-tech and transistor based (bar the top of the line valve amps) often with built in digital effects. Wink
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oliverstoned View Drop Down
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: October 25 2006 at 10:57
You talk about current artists (digital).
Actually, jazz and classical recording studios are far more tidy with sound than rick studios.
If it seems pointless to you to spent much on equipment, it's just because you haven't heard it.
My system is around 10000€ and should be soon around 15000€ and it blows what you can hear in studio.
It's like a hard drug because it's so good!
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: October 25 2006 at 11:05
Oliver,
 
Could you tell me what exactly an audiophile is looking for.  I've read the last few posts of yours on this topic and you seem to be arguing against yourself over some points.  Then you mention a sub woofer, surely that isn't audiophile kit.  Sub woofers can give an interesting sound and add depth but they certainly aren't faithful to the original recording.  You also make completely unjustified comments both about vinyl and CD.  You talk about the dynamic range of vinyl; well the main advantages of CD are the enhanced dynamic range and lack of noise.  Everyone in audio understands that 16 bit CD has more dynamic range than the best possible vinyl, that's just simple physics.
 
I'm just curious to know what it is you are looking for.
 
Neil.
 
When people get lost in thought it's often because it's unfamiliar territory.
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Neil View Drop Down
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: October 25 2006 at 11:08
Originally posted by oliverstoned oliverstoned wrote:

My system is around 10000€ and should be soon around 15000€ and it blows what you can hear in studio.
 
Again I don't understand what you mean here.  Surely the recording that you are listening to was mixed in a recording studio and the sound that was heard in the studio was the sound that the band and the engineer wanted to hear.  How can your system sound "better than studio".  If it doesn't sound the same as the artist intended then you aren't listening to the original sound.  You may well prefer the sound that you get but it isn't necessarily better.


Edited by Heavyfreight - October 25 2006 at 11:09
When people get lost in thought it's often because it's unfamiliar territory.
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N Ellingworth View Drop Down
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: October 25 2006 at 12:37
Originally posted by oliverstoned oliverstoned wrote:

You talk about current artists (digital).
Actually, jazz and classical recording studios are far more tidy with sound than rick studios.
If it seems pointless to you to spent much on equipment, it's just because you haven't heard it.
My system is around 10000€ and should be soon around 15000€ and it blows what you can hear in studio.
It's like a hard drug because it's so good!


I have heard high end hi-fi systems the difference was marginal at best, of course I will remain open minded about this, if I hear a £10000 system that is far higher quality than my £300 system I'll admit it, but I would never buy it as I'm happy with what I've got and I'd rather spend the money on more music to listen to. Big smile
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oliverstoned View Drop Down
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: October 25 2006 at 13:44
If the difference was marginal, it was simply not a good system. Price means nothing. A 1 000 000 dollars system can be bad, less good than a 1000 dollars well composed one.

Without talking about the source, here are the conditions for a system to work, WHATEVER THE PRICE:

-ALL the elements must be good and musical. If all your system is good except your preamp i.e, the whole wil be bad. That's what's tricky. Price means NOTHING. There are good and bad things in all price ranges.

-Tubes in wide-band, or bi amp with tubes in the highs.
So, if you must have only one amp, it must be tube.
There are some nice solid-state which work decently in the highs, but no comparison with a good valve one.

-Good cables, proportioned to the elements (Interconnects+power cables)(bad ones downgrade)

-Separated power lines direct to the home counter.

-A minimum of good power filters (bad ones downgrade)

-A minimum of cancelling device under each element.

-Several essential tips such as: power phase respect,
horizontality for turning machines (Cd player/turntable).


Few audiophiles apply all the points, many systems are:

Digital + solidstate, no power optimization and no vibration treatment most of the time. And the guys believe that they will compensate their system's flaws with acoustic treatment. This said, the speaker's position in the room is essential as well.

As you see, it's quite complex (and simple at the same time)and it's virtually impossible to do well in the esoteric world of Hifi, if you don't have a solid background. I had the chance to meet a very "big" audiophile, one of the biggest in France, his experience is the result of 35 years of research.

A few words about his setup:

-CD : The biggest Mark Levinson Setup, about 45 000 € (drive + convertor of course)

-Turntable : Constantly changing, still in research.

-Tuner: Marantz 10B

-Tapedeck: Nakamichi 1000zxl Gold

-Preamp: Mark Levinson 32 Reference, the best ever.

Bi-amplification:

-Low: Two mono blocks Goldmund 9.4
-Highs: Constantly changing, always tube: two mono blocks
Conrad Jonhson, Antique sound lab, Graaf...

-Speakers: Genesis (a brand created by the "Infinity" conceptor). A blend of electrodynamic speakers for low,
and rubon tweaters in the highs (the best for highs).

Cables: "Transparent cables" for Interconnects (something like 80 000€ for the whole), "Nordost" in power cables (3000€ each cable), "Transparent cables" power isolators,
"Richard Grey" filters.









    
    
    
    
    

Edited by oliverstoned - October 26 2006 at 06:25
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MikeEnRegalia View Drop Down
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: October 25 2006 at 13:56
3000€ power cables ... 'nuff said!Tongue


(But they surely look impressiveWink)
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N Ellingworth View Drop Down
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: October 25 2006 at 14:03
How can a power cable cost 3000€?

What is is made of? even if it's gold it should cost that much.
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MikeEnRegalia View Drop Down
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: October 25 2006 at 14:04
^ it comes with its own power supply and glows in the dark. (no joke)
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: October 25 2006 at 14:06
LOL

I've got a USB cable like that cost me about £7
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Certif1ed View Drop Down
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: October 26 2006 at 03:32
When you use digital kit, the difference a cable can make is minimal compared to analogue kit, which is hit hard by impedence.

It strikes me that a powered connection must somehow be active - and therefore must reprocess the signal somehow. Wouldn't that alter the sound?

The sound from a high-end mixing desk like this or this through high-end studio amps like this and this with top-end studio monitors like this being fed by the master tape coming from a 2" reel cannot be matched by any Hi-Fi - unless you also had access to the master tape and a suitable player like this;


...I speak from experience...

     
    

/edit - you may need to edit the last link - the forum nanny censor software changes SWEET WATER to sweet**ter!!

I wonder what it does to Sc**thorpe?


/edit - ah...


Better not live here then... (you may need to edit the urls a little...)
     
    
    
    

Edited by Certif1ed - October 26 2006 at 03:49
The important thing is not to stop questioning.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: October 26 2006 at 06:01
I would listen to vinyl but I don't have a record player so all those Rush albums just look cool.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: October 26 2006 at 06:10
   
Nothing in studio can match the top level system i described up.

About top level power cables, her's one:

Shunyata Research Anaconda Helix




"
•• Patented 6x6 Helix geometry
• Braided by hand
• 13 conductors
• 8 gauge aggregate
• Cryogenic CDA-101 pure copper
• Shunyata Venom AC & IEC
-- Silver plated, cryogenically treated
• 8 Flexible 1.0" diameter - 6ft/1.8 m length
• Patented FeSi-1000
-- Noise reduction compound (VX only)

Years ago, the Anaconda was used only as an in house world reference power cord for testing and experimentation, but like any good secret, word got out, demand started and a legend was born. The Anaconda Helix Series power cords continue the tradition. Despite their expense and complexity to produce and their matching higher retail price, the Anaconda Helix's continue to be one of the most demanded and discussed power cords in Shunyata Research's entire line. Countless studios, from Pink Floyd's Astoria to James Guthrie, from Sony to Rick Rubin, have purchased the Anacondas in bunches. If only the best will do, it's no longer a "secret" that the Anaconda Helix power cords are the real thing."










    

Edited by oliverstoned - October 26 2006 at 06:12
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oliverstoned View Drop Down
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: October 26 2006 at 06:12
Originally posted by progismylife progismylife wrote:

I would listen to vinyl but I don't have a record player so all those Rush albums just look cool.


You should look for a Rega Planer 3 turntable with a "Elyss" or "Super Elyss" cartridge.
    
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