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MikeEnRegalia View Drop Down
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: May 29 2008 at 06:03
^ The album is available on Napster ... I'll listen to the song!
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: May 29 2008 at 10:47
Originally posted by Dick Heath Dick Heath wrote:

It is worth noting that in the examples of ELP and Edgar Winter (e.g. on Frankinstein) introduced channel phasing around 1970 - i.e. a particular sound shifting from RH to LH and perhaps back again over several seconds of music  - a gimmick that surprisingly did  not last too long -  I wonder if anybody has employed it more recently?
Whether or not it's considered a "gimmick", I still find the effect makes for a more enjoyable listening experience for me than if certain sound effects or notes were played without "moving."
 
Anyways, I only have the CD editions of them, but I do remember hearing channel-crossing on Zeppelin II, and the ending of ELP's "Karn Evil 9 (3rd Impression)" of course has those classic "blips" floating back and forth. I'm pretty sure the intro to Sabbath's "Iron Man" features it too... And I can't forget Pink Floyd's Final Cut, with various sound effects such as rockets "flying" through my headphones. (Is it a safe assumption that these effects were on the original LP's?)
 
Most recently, I have heard it in the form of various sound effects on the Animal Collective album Strawberry Jam, with tracks such as "Cuckoo Cuckoo." I'm not 100% sure but I may have also heard some channel phasing on Panda Bear's album Person Pitch as well. I guess the "gimmick" is still (at least somewhat) alive.
 
Consider this: does anyone know of recordings (stereo- or monophonic) that originally had "stable" sounds but integrated channel-crossing on the CD (or even other vinyl) remasters?


Edited by ClassicRocker - May 29 2008 at 11:08
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: May 29 2008 at 23:15
So for those of us in the US, what do we have?  Say of ITCOTKC?  Just some Atlantic released sh*te?
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: May 30 2008 at 07:10
^You should be able to get hold of an MFSL or Japanese pressing in the US if it's quality vinyl you're after - they're cheaper than a "Pink Island".
 
 
Japanese pressing ($40 isn't pushing it - these are very collectable, especially with the OBI);
 
 
 
 
MFSL pressing (bargain - $60 would be a good price, but I wouldn't be surprised to see it go for $100).
 
 
 
Pink i Island pressing (Could go for anything between £100-500).
 


Edited by Certif1ed - May 30 2008 at 07:24
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: May 30 2008 at 08:50
Originally posted by MikeEnRegalia MikeEnRegalia wrote:


Originally posted by Certif1ed Certif1ed wrote:

It has an almost tangible quality to it that digital sound DOES NOT REPRODUCE.

 


Maybe someone can do the science and work out why, because all the evidence points to vinyl being significantly inferior - and yet it still sounds better.
I think that the conclusion must be that the most accurate representation of the original recording is not always the one which sounds best (subjectively). Perhaps it's the way the first pressing reproduces the music which you love so much - how that particular pressing was mastered, the material used, the quality of the manufacturing process etc..For someone like me the world is entirely different ... for me the remastered digital releases are the benchmark. Vinyl can sound as good or even (subjectively) better, but there are many hazards along the way ... as I had to learn when I recently purchased the re-mastered vinyl edition of Metallica's Ride the Lightning. High quality, half-speed, 180gr etc. but sounds horrible.


Pure bullsh*ts from someone who has no experience on the subject...
A good vynil has much more informations than the same album on CD, and most of the last CD remasters are horrible, unlisteneable.


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Direct Link To This Post Posted: May 30 2008 at 09:27
^ always nice to hear from you again!Big%20smile
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: May 30 2008 at 14:51
Originally posted by ClassicRocker ClassicRocker wrote:

And I can't forget Pink Floyd's Final Cut, with various sound effects such as rockets "flying" through my headphones. (Is it a safe assumption that these effects were on the original LP's?)

Yes, they were on the vinyl too, they're examples of holophonics (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Holophonics).





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Direct Link To This Post Posted: May 30 2008 at 15:24
^Those holophonics were used even more widely on "The Pros and Cons of Hitchiking" - it's the best thing about the album, IMHO...
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: May 31 2008 at 18:55
Originally posted by Certif1ed Certif1ed wrote:

 
It has an almost tangible quality to it that digital sound DOES NOT REPRODUCE.
 
Maybe someone can do the science and work out why, because all the evidence points to vinyl being significantly inferior - and yet it still sounds better.
 
The answer is smoke and mirrors.
 
Digitising quantises the information into digital words of 16-bits every 22.7µS.
 
Most people are aware of the amplitude quantisation, (a 16-bit digital waveform is composed of 65536 discrete voltage levels), but it also quantises in the frequency domain.
 
In an earlier thread on the same subject I posted that: "This quantisation means you do not get an infinite number of frequencies across the spectrum - you get a finite number of discrete frequencies that are sub-harmonics of the sampling frequency.
 
Hence, the sampling frequency used on CD's (or on any digital media) will only accurately reproduce frequencies that are an exact division of the sampling frequency - all other frequencies are spread into adjacent subdivisions and require all those subdivisions to recreate the original. "
 
This is because the sampling frequency of 44.1KHz only samples the signal every 22.7µS, which means that it can only accurately reproduce signals that are sub-harmonics of 44.1KHz ... all other frequencies are inaccurate representations.
 
In principle we should not be able to tell the difference - all the component frequencies added together should recrerate the original, however because the signals are also amplitute quantised it means that the amplitudes of all the individual subharmonics are only aproximations, so the final recreation will also be an approximation.
 
 
What?
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 01 2008 at 00:50
^ I'm with you there. Of course digital recordings are always approximations of the original (analogue) data - no fan of digital audio or video would say otherwise. But the important thing is: Does this approximation happen on a level of detail which is beyond our ability to detect (hear)? I definitely think so.

Listening tests show that people can't tell the sources apart - if anything, they'll hear the different mix of a vinyl release compared to the CD remastered version, or the CD version is simply much brighter and contains more treble information than the vinyl release they're used to, which leads to statements like "CD sounds harsh". I'm 100% sure that in a double blind test comparing the actual master tape to a properly sampled version in 16bit/44.1khz, nobody would be able to tell the difference ... except maybe for some extreme cases, either extreme listeners with unusually good ears or signals which provoke glitches or exploit weaknesses in the recording process. For those we have advanced digital formats (24bit/96khz) which are *beyond* any human ear. Whatever the details, digital formats *are* clearly superior over any analogue consumer format, and even in the professional domain their advantages are obvious.


Edited by MikeEnRegalia - June 01 2008 at 00:54
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 01 2008 at 15:28
I've given up on the science of which sounds better, I just KNOW that vinyl sounds better. Yesterday, i wandered down to a local record fair and picked up 20 or so albums for about 40 quid. Granted most are collection closers and not worth bothering with but I did get a few worthwhile records. My wife did too. But on CD. She bought a Jamiroquai singles collection on CD and when we got home plonked this in the (these days) almost unused CD player in our living room. Now, it's a good system, Roksan Kandy MkIII into a Promitheus Audio TVC passive pre and Myryad power into Sonus Faber Concerto Domus speakers. It sounded fine Lots of deep bass, loud and punchy.
And then I stuck on the copy of Free's Fire and Water I'd bought (on an LP12 with Origin Live modded RB300 into a Graham Slee Era Gold MkV). The album is a pink-rim Island label, not the full pink label 1st press and yet it still made the CD player  sound a bucket of old bolts. And a flat, two dimensional bucket at that.
The soundstage was vast by comparison, the front to back depth cavernous compared to CD and the placement of instruments in space almost tangible.
I may be a luddite but science be damned. Vinyl destroys CD every time. Personally I feel a lot of this is not just about the limitations of CD as a medium but also factors in the recording techniques used these days.
Just about every one of my 70s rock records, recorded on analogue tape via live performance using microphones and actual air in the room sound superior to the in-computer, DI'd, over EQ'd, fixed in the mix, spliced, looped and over-compressed rubbish that comes out of Pro-Tools these days,.
I completely agree with Cert on the issue of first presses too. I have first press Vertigo swirl eidtions of Black Sabbath's first album and Vol 4 and if you put these on after later presses they have greater dynamic swing, greater depth, better articulation and just sound punchier, louder and more "there" than later presses.
The same is even true of the 2nd press I have of Dark Side of the Moon. It just knocks spots off the late 70s other pressing i have.
As for MFSL pressings, I recently got their astounding pressing of Permanent Waves. It's simply awesome and now the only use I have for the CD remaster is as a coaster.
Vinyl is more fun, more interesting, sounds way better, looks better, feels better. Period.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 01 2008 at 15:50
Originally posted by arcer arcer wrote:


And then I stuck on the copy of Free's Fire and Water I'd bought (on an LP12 with Origin Live modded RB300 into a Graham Slee Era Gold MkV). The album is a pink-rim Island label, not the full pink label 1st press and yet it still made the CD player  sound a bucket of old bolts. And a flat, two dimensional bucket at that.
The soundstage was vast by comparison, the front to back depth cavernous compared to CD and the placement of instruments in space almost tangible.


The power of imagination ... quite impressive. But I wonder: Why would you compare Jamiroquai singles with 70s Rock? I mean, Jamiroquai is usually well produced, but the singles are definitely catered for radio/club play.

Put on an Ozric Tentacles CD ... then we could be getting somewhere.Big%20smile
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 01 2008 at 16:43
I wasn't purposefully comparing. In fact I wasn't comparing at all. My wife had been listening to the Jamiroquai CD and then I change it for Free on vinyl. The difference in quality was startling. And nothing to do with imagination. Why would I take the time to imagine one of two such disparate recordings sounded better. It just quantifiably did. In every respect - bass, mids, treble, soundstage (left/right and front/back), dynamics, placement - everything. I've been listening to music reproduced on dceent hi-fi equipment for 20 year, I kind think I can separate wishful thinking from describable sonic event.
And to say the Jamiroquai singles have been produced for clubs is rubbish. the version of Space Cowboy on the hits CD is the album version not the four to the floor version and the album also contains things like Seven Days in Sunnt June which is hardly a club anthem.
It was a simple but quite marked observation. The CD sounded, flat, dry and 2D, the vinyl springy, alive, tangible and vibrant.
If that is my imagination then I'll continue to live in fantasy land.

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 01 2008 at 16:57
I didn't intend any insult ... I just found it odd that you would use this comparison between these two very different recordings to deduce that vinyl is better. You're welcome to your opinion, I simply don't understand why vinyl should offer better bass, mids, treble, soundstage, dynamics or placement ... digital formats store information much more accurately and reliably, and today I had the pleasure of listening to the new Opeth album, which is so well produced and recorded that it blew me away, both the "ordinary" CD version and the 5.1 mix in dts format. I'll get the vinyl release too ... then I'll be able to do a direct comparison.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 02 2008 at 07:16
Originally posted by arcer arcer wrote:


And then I stuck on the copy of Free's Fire and Water I'd bought (on an LP12 with Origin Live modded RB300 into a Graham Slee Era Gold MkV). The album is a pink-rim Island label, not the full pink label 1st press and yet it still made the CD player  sound a bucket of old bolts. And a flat, two dimensional bucket at that.
The soundstage was vast by comparison, the front to back depth cavernous compared to CD and the placement of instruments in space almost tangible.
I may be a luddite but science be damned. Vinyl destroys CD every time. Personally I feel a lot of this is not just about the limitations of CD as a medium but also factors in the recording techniques used these days.
Just about every one of my 70s rock records, recorded on analogue tape via live performance using microphones and actual air in the room sound superior to the in-computer, DI'd, over EQ'd, fixed in the mix, spliced, looped and over-compressed rubbish that comes out of Pro-Tools these days,.
I completely agree with Cert on the issue of first presses too. I have first press Vertigo swirl eidtions of Black Sabbath's first album and Vol 4 and if you put these on after later presses they have greater dynamic swing, greater depth, better articulation and just sound punchier, louder and more "there" than later presses.
The same is even true of the 2nd press I have of Dark Side of the Moon. It just knocks spots off the late 70s other pressing i have.
As for MFSL pressings, I recently got their astounding pressing of Permanent Waves. It's simply awesome and now the only use I have for the CD remaster is as a coaster.
Vinyl is more fun, more interesting, sounds way better, looks better, feels better. Period.
 
 
...Ooops - quoted, but the post got left behind Embarrassed
 
Was just going to agree that some labels sound notably better than others - Island, Atlantic, Vertigo all sound really meaty - especially "Plum & Orange" Atlantics - Deja Vu by CSNY is incredibly rich, while Led Zep II is a noted test for any HiFi system. DSoTM is an odd case - the 2nd press IS really good, but the 1st has a rawness that all subsequent presses lack. Late 1970s-1980s have adistinctive syrupy quality, which is worse on all the CDs and remasters - like someone truly thought they could improve on the original.
 
I know which Floyd I prefer, when choosing between the Floyd on "Pompeii" and the Floyd on any other official live release, and the 1st (2nd and 3rd - yes, I have copies of each Embarrassed) sound closer to the former.
 
 
Originally posted by MikeEnRegalia MikeEnRegalia wrote:

(...) Of course digital recordings are always approximations of the original (analogue) data - no fan of digital audio or video would say otherwise. But the important thing is: Does this approximation happen on a level of detail which is beyond our ability to detect (hear)? I definitely think so. (...)
 
Hearing is only one way of experiencing music, which is made of physical sound waves. Change the properties of a sound wave enough, and you might as well be listening to something else.
 
By changing just one sound, the harmonics, etc necessarily change. The interfereces of one sound wave with another become different, and the waves that hit your body (whether it's the ears or anywhere else) are different (I'm not really up with all the science of this, being an artist, but I get the principle).
 
If you don't think that sound waves affect parts of the body other than the ears, then you've never stood near a bass bin at a rock concert Wink
 
Originally posted by MikeEnRegalia MikeEnRegalia wrote:


Listening tests show that people can't tell the sources apart
 
Tests can show all sorts of things - I've conducted tests in my sitting room and at work computers that say otherwise  Wink
 
 
Originally posted by MikeEnRegalia MikeEnRegalia wrote:

(...) Whatever the details, digital formats *are* clearly superior over any analogue consumer format, and even in the professional domain their advantages are obvious.
 
Digital formats can be proven to be superior *technically*.
 
In other ways, analogue is still considered to be superior by a large body of people - no matter what the numbers say.
 
Taste overrules science in many things. Wink


Edited by Certif1ed - June 02 2008 at 15:09
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 02 2008 at 08:53
Originally posted by MikeEnRegalia MikeEnRegalia wrote:

I didn't intend any insult ... I just found it odd that you would use this comparison between these two very different recordings to deduce that vinyl is better. You're welcome to your opinion, I simply don't understand why vinyl should offer better bass, mids, treble, soundstage, dynamics or placement ... digital formats store information much more accurately and reliably, and today I had the pleasure of listening to the new Opeth album, which is so well produced and recorded that it blew me away, both the "ordinary" CD version and the 5.1 mix in dts format. I'll get the vinyl release too ... then I'll be able to do a direct comparison.


Sorry Mike, I didn't mean my tone to come across as err cross! It wasn't at all.
 
The thing I find about this endless debate is that more and more I get the feeling that accuracy is over-rated.
I'll give a very unscientific example. Distortion, within reason, is pleasing to the ear. In terms of the accuracy of transciption distortion should in some sense make the experience unpleasant and should register as somehow being 'wrong', yet mild forms of distortion can be pleasant to the human ear. Mild clipping can enhance the 'feeling' in music.

I grant you, there is absolutely no scientific reason why CDs shouldn't sound way better than vinyl. Certainly this should be the case with SACD and, if it ever happens, certainly with Blu-Ray, given the possibilities that opens up for audio. (In fact, I have a sneaking supsicion audio-only Blu-Ray could blow all arguments out of the water).

Regardless of the digital accuracy of CD, though, vinyl, to my ears, still sounds better. And more and more I reallty do think this is down to how music was/is recorded. I listen to a lot of newly realeased vinyl, and honestly, it is no better or worse than the CD equivalent. I'd be happy to own either (save for the artwork with vinyl).

I do believe that it is recording and mastering that makes 70s rock records sound better than modern rock records and I think a lot has to do with recording out of the digital domain to start with. Stick a mic a foot from the speaker enclosure of an amp, one a metre away and one behind or overhead and record it. I guarantee the recorded result will be better, by far, than DI'ing the same guitar and brewing an approximation of the same tone in Guitar Rig.

I think the same applies to mastering (though I'm no expert at all). Mastering for CD these days seems to revolve around excessive amounts of compression and peak limiting to do two things:
1. To enhance the "loudness" of a recording
2. The flatten dynamics so that things can be listened to without great volume shifts between quiet and loud passages on i-Pods, car stereos.

In days of yore, such limiting and compression was applied to simply fit the music to vinyl and the reasonable levels of compression used to master to a 3-minute 7" or 20-minute side of 12" are often quoted as having a benign effect on the sound of pop music, apparently making perfdormances sound "more together".

The only are where, to my ears, this definitely does not seem the cae is classical music. I would rather listen to classical music on CD or SACD than vinyl any day as it for whatever reason offers greater definition, more headroom, and better articulation.

I have no idea why this is. I have mint supposedly audiophile classical recordings on vinyl which leave me cold compared with the CD versions. Conversely, 70s rock music on vinyl just rocks in a way the CD remasters never can match. Led Zep's recent Mothership compilation is a good example. Despite the much-vaunted umpteenth rematsering of the tracks on it, none sounds as good as my scratchy old 1st press Zep III which just swings in a way the CD does not.

I can't offer any explanation than the emotional. The vinyl sings, the CD merely plays. But it's just my ears telling me that.

What I can suggest to anyone thinking about investing in vinyl as an alternative to CD is - tread carefully.
You can get an awful lot of performance out of a 500 euro CD player. To get the same level of performance and better out of a turntable will cost a lot more. Turntables are funny beasts and the while a CD player is plug and play a turntable requires balance, fettling and the correct matching or cartridge to arm, arm to 'table, table to phono stage and on and on. It's a minefield and you won't get seriously good vinyl performance until you're well into 2,000 euro territory.

Vinyl is utterly addictive (as my Ebay account will verify) and the best way to listen to music of a certain vintage but it can also be prohibitively expensive (as my wife and bank account will verify). 


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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 02 2008 at 10:06
^ I'll post a lengthy response later ... right now I'll only say this:

I agree that collecting vinyl can be addictive - I've become a collector myself. But I don't think you need to invest such amounts of money, be it CD or vinyl. I have a low cost record player which cost me 120 € (new!). I listen to CDs on my computer, with the 20 € built in DVD-ROM drive, connect to a 80 € Logitech 5.1 speaker system via the on-board Realtek 97 sound chip (24bit/96khz internal resolution). I think we both agree that those components mark the bottom end of the price range ... but they offer great value for money, and I would never trade them in for anything else, because they sound fine to me. I've heard big systems - ranging from expensive professional studio equipment to audiophile hi-fi systems - , I still own a Harman Kardon system with good cabinets (not audiophile, but still) and until a couple of years ago I had a Musical Fidelity amplifier and Magnat cabinets. The *only* think I currently want to upgrade is the Logitech speaker system: I'll probably buy the big Z-5500 which is THX certified and has digital connectors with built in Dolby/dts decoders. But that will also cost me at most 250 €.

You - or oliverstoned - will probably remind me that on such "low-fi" equipment the quality of vinyl can't be judged to begin with. But: I'm able to hear most of the differences between recordings which are usually described in posts and reviews. I can hear differences between low-bitrate mp3 and CD. I can hear differences between bad mixes and good ones. I have sound stage quality (sweet spot) / depth perception in my room. All that tells me that my system can't be that bad - and subjectively it sounds awesome, as also attested by friends and colleagues. Maybe one day I'll upgrade my no-name record player to a better one - maybe a Regar Planar III - but I doubt that the sound quality will improve in proportion to the price of the equipment. I think it will rumble less, track better, and the accuracy will improve ... all very well, but I seriously doubt it will open an entirely new dimension of listening pleasure.


Edited by MikeEnRegalia - June 02 2008 at 10:08
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 02 2008 at 15:21
Some expensive vinyl is worth it - MFSL's definitely sound better on "audiophile" systems than on cheap amps - my amp blew recently and I borrowed a friends; My first presses sound flat, my MFSL's sound tinny and cheap - but my CDs sound fine, as do most of my 1980s recordings (which are on thin, cheap vinyl). I find that very telling. 
 
But, on my decent amp - and many a sound engineer's I've spoken to, a first press of Led Zep II is a true test of a HiFi's capability. In my opinion, it's worth every penny.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 02 2008 at 16:21
^ that really sounds like black magic to me. Let's say that for some unknown reasons your first pressing of Led Zeppelin II really is the holy grail of all benchmarks ... the best recording ever in terms of sound. Then why would it sound crappy on your friend's amp? Why would a good source sound worse on a lo-fi amp than a bad source. The only explanation *I* can think of (doesn't mean it's right!) would be that you're simply used to how this pressing sounds on your own amp.

Well, I guess I'll never have a chance to listen to that album on my system, so instead I'll try to set up my system so that the sources which I use sound great.Smile
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 03 2008 at 03:24
Originally posted by arcer arcer wrote:



The thing I find about this endless debate is that more and more I get the feeling that accuracy is over-rated.
I'll give a very unscientific example. Distortion, within reason, is pleasing to the ear. In terms of the accuracy of transciption distortion should in some sense make the experience unpleasant and should register as somehow being 'wrong', yet mild forms of distortion can be pleasant to the human ear. Mild clipping can enhance the 'feeling' in music.



I agree. But there are different kinds of distortion. The kind you want is called "harmonic distortion" and is usually created by tubes. Digital clipping however doesn't sound pleasant at all.

BTW: Maybe what annoys me about some audiophiles is that they claim that their highest goal is to reproduce the original signal as accurately as possible - but at the same time they employ techniques which clearly alter the signal.

Originally posted by arcer arcer wrote:



I grant you, there is absolutely no scientific reason why CDs shouldn't sound way better than vinyl. Certainly this should be the case with SACD and, if it ever happens, certainly with Blu-Ray, given the possibilities that opens up for audio. (In fact, I have a sneaking supsicion audio-only Blu-Ray could blow all arguments out of the water).



I don't think that we'll see another audio format beyond SACD and DVD-Audio. It wouldn't make sense to use digital cameras with 100 million pixels, or TV formats with resolutions of 10000x10000 ... by the same reason it doesn't make sense to extend resolution of audio formats beyond 96khz. *Maybe* bit depth will be increased from 24 bit to 32 bit, but I seriously doubt even that.

But one thing that might happen is that entire discographies could be released on Blu-Ray - or collections which include both music (albums) and video (performances, documentaries). Of course only after we have all purchased everything on CD and DVD ... Wink

Originally posted by arcer arcer wrote:



Regardless of the digital accuracy of CD, though, vinyl, to my ears, still sounds better. And more and more I reallty do think this is down to how music was/is recorded. I listen to a lot of newly realeased vinyl, and honestly, it is no better or worse than the CD equivalent. I'd be happy to own either (save for the artwork with vinyl).

I do believe that it is recording and mastering that makes 70s rock records sound better than modern rock records and I think a lot has to do with recording out of the digital domain to start with. Stick a mic a foot from the speaker enclosure of an amp, one a metre away and one behind or overhead and record it. I guarantee the recorded result will be better, by far, than DI'ing the same guitar and brewing an approximation of the same tone in Guitar Rig.



Not so sure about what you said about guitar recording. Miking a guitar is actually a very difficult and cumbersome process ... you can't just "stick" some microphones around an amp and voila, there's a great sound. On the other hand the modern amp modellers do all that for you ... the simple ones had no room/microphone simulation at all, then they simulated one microphone, then you could move it around in a room (and change the room), and today you can use multiple microphones.

Of course you can do it "old school", but modelling technology is constantly improved and has today reached a point where you really can't tell it apart from the real thing, if configured properly.

Originally posted by arcer arcer wrote:



I think the same applies to mastering (though I'm no expert at all). Mastering for CD these days seems to revolve around excessive amounts of compression and peak limiting to do two things:
1. To enhance the "loudness" of a recording
2. The flatten dynamics so that things can be listened to without great volume shifts between quiet and loud passages on i-Pods, car stereos.



As I said elsewhere: I'm listening to *a lot* of new releases, and outside of mainstream I don't hear that much compression. If you want to risk a little experiment: Get the new No-Man album (or the re-release of Porcupine Tree - Lightbulb Sun). You can also get them on vinyl if you like, and the CD versions both include the DVD-Audio version.

Originally posted by arcer arcer wrote:



In days of yore, such limiting and compression was applied to simply fit the music to vinyl and the reasonable levels of compression used to master to a 3-minute 7" or 20-minute side of 12" are often quoted as having a benign effect on the sound of pop music, apparently making perfdormances sound "more together".



Compressing and limiting were always done ... ever since there was radio. IMO it is wrong to do it, since it cannot be reversed ... it's an effect which should be applied during playback. The true problem is that digital media increased the possible dynamic range so much that compression has become necessary for stuff that is targeted for radio.

Originally posted by arcer arcer wrote:



The only are where, to my ears, this definitely does not seem the cae is classical music. I would rather listen to classical music on CD or SACD than vinyl any day as it for whatever reason offers greater definition, more headroom, and better articulation.



Thank you for this statement. The reason is obvious however: it is more accurate and has greater dynamic range, resulting in a better signal to noise ratio.

Originally posted by arcer arcer wrote:



I have no idea why this is. I have mint supposedly audiophile classical recordings on vinyl which leave me cold compared with the CD versions. Conversely, 70s rock music on vinyl just rocks in a way the CD remasters never can match. Led Zep's recent Mothership compilation is a good example. Despite the much-vaunted umpteenth rematsering of the tracks on it, none sounds as good as my scratchy old 1st press Zep III which just swings in a way the CD does not.

I can't offer any explanation than the emotional. The vinyl sings, the CD merely plays. But it's just my ears telling me that.



I think you simply got attached to the vinyl sound. It is your benchmark, and anything which is different is less good to you. Maybe it's the same for me and digital formats.

Originally posted by arcer arcer wrote:



What I can suggest to anyone thinking about investing in vinyl as an alternative to CD is - tread carefully.
You can get an awful lot of performance out of a 500 euro CD player. To get the same level of performance and better out of a turntable will cost a lot more. Turntables are funny beasts and the while a CD player is plug and play a turntable requires balance, fettling and the correct matching or cartridge to arm, arm to 'table, table to phono stage and on and on. It's a minefield and you won't get seriously good vinyl performance until you're well into 2,000 euro territory.

Vinyl is utterly addictive (as my Ebay account will verify) and the best way to listen to music of a certain vintage but it can also be prohibitively expensive (as my wife and bank account will verify). 



As I stated before: I don't think that you have to invest that kind of money into hi-fi equipment. You have to select it carefully, especially amp and speakers. But when it comes to CD players, IMHO even the cheapest (modern) one will do ... if you like classical music you should get one which also plays SACD, but SACD/DVD-Audio often contain 5.1 mixes so you'll probably have to get a surround system. This is how I arrived at my solution: The Logitech computer speakers:

http://reviews.cnet.com/pc-speakers/logitech-z-5500-digital/4852-3179_7-31115626.html

As you can see, opinions are divided on them. Some say they're not suitable for music, some say the exact opposite. If you have a decent current computer (a new Core Duo / AMD X2 board with hi-def audio on board) and no 5.1 system at all, then my suggestion would be to try the Logitech X-530 to get started - I'll soon start a separate thread about this.Smile

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