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Jake Kobrin View Drop Down
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: January 22 2010 at 18:49
It's infinitely better on vinyl. The only time that CDs are ever superior to vinyl in any sense is when they're remastered and/or remixed from the vinyl version. Still, if the remixed and restored versions were pressed on vinyl, it'd be awesome! 
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: January 23 2010 at 14:53
Originally posted by mono mono wrote:

Get this for your pets!



My pets would have that thing torn to shreads in no time!
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: January 24 2010 at 13:47
CD 's have been superceded by downloaded MP3's and are now obsolete - they were never intended to be audiophile quality, despite the claims, they were just another marketing ploy.
 
Vinyl is enjoying a resurgence as many find the quality of the sound vastly superior to digital technology, but steer well clear of those USB turntables, they are rubbish - a good quality vinyl system of used gear  could be easily put together  for around 400 GBP, and the results will astound you.  check out this site...
 
 
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: January 24 2010 at 14:10

Check my signature picture, right one ;-) Guess:

1)Which album it is (beware, it's tricky one)

2)What format it is (for sure cassette)

3)How long do I have it

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: January 24 2010 at 14:40
Pragmatism : stick with cds. It's quite incredible in our commercial world, but if you take care of your cds, the will never wear.
I'm quite shocked that some of you are recommending these cheap vinyl/usb stuff. Come on it's just crap ! At such prices no one can expect to have the full vinyl quality. (Just one thought : does anyone has already checked if these new turntables were at least playing both sound channels at the volume ?)

To experience the real superiority of vinyl over you have to have quite an expensive stereo system. If you do not, enjoy cds! They're now cheap (how many wonderfull classics for 5 or 7 €/$ on the internet?), easy to store, quality is constant over time, and sound quality is of course excellent.

Do I have to mention that by now, nobody has been able to prove that those dvd audio and SACD were providing better sound quality than cd ?
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: January 25 2010 at 03:47
Originally posted by d.o.k d.o.k wrote:


Do I have to mention that by now, nobody has been able to prove that those dvd audio and SACD were providing better sound quality than cd ?


hmm...
Concerning audio DVDs: For the sampling frequency matter, noone can prove that 192kHz brings better results than 44.1, but the 24-bit depth brings a higher signal-to-noise ratio.
Still, you must have a very accurate and noiseless (and expensive) system in order to appreciate the difference.
SACD is based on 1-bit coding, said to be much more accurate than PCM used on CD. Of course, a high-end system is also needed here to make full use of this format...

I would say DVDs and SACDs are definitely not "the next format" as predicted by Sony and Philipps around 10 years ago... CD is the last physical format.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: January 25 2010 at 08:28
Originally posted by d.o.k d.o.k wrote:


I'm quite shocked that some of you are recommending these cheap vinyl/usb stuff. Come on it's just crap !
 
Sounds good to me. Project make some good turntables.
 
Originally posted by d.o.k d.o.k wrote:

At such prices no one can expect to have the full vinyl quality.
 
"Full" vinyl quality?
 
It sounds pretty close to me Smile
 
Originally posted by d.o.k d.o.k wrote:

Just one thought : does anyone has already checked if these new turntables were at least playing both sound channels at the volume ?
 
Yup - just checked. AOK.
 
Originally posted by d.o.k d.o.k wrote:



To experience the real superiority of vinyl over you have to have quite an expensive stereo system.
 
It is a myth to say you only get what you pay for.
 
A 2nd hand Marshall JCM 800 costing £500 sounds a hundred times better than a brand new boutique amp costing 10x that amount.
 
A 4th press Rubber Soul sounds as good as the first press, yet you can get one for £20 instead of £200.
 
HiFi buffs are always keen to say that their expensive kit is the only kit worth listening to - but in my experience, that simply isn't true.
 
Originally posted by d.o.k d.o.k wrote:

 If you do not, enjoy cds! They're now cheap (how many wonderfull classics for 5 or 7 €/$ on the internet?), easy to store, quality is constant over time, and sound quality is of course excellent.
 
Have to agree to disagree - I don't like the sound of CDs, which is why I prefer vinyl... Wink
 
 
Originally posted by d.o.k d.o.k wrote:


Do I have to mention that by now, nobody has been able to prove that those dvd audio and SACD were providing better sound quality than cd ?
 
Um... I don't think anybody needs to try to prove it - both formats store more data and are therefore more accurate than CD. Fact.
 
IF better sound quality = more accurate reproduction, THEN DVD > SACD > CD > vinyl.
 
 
But even on my cheap steam-powered system, vinyl sounds better - and my wife agrees. Big smile


Edited by Certif1ed - January 25 2010 at 08:29
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: January 25 2010 at 13:03
^ I also have some vinyls that IMO sound better than the CD versions ... but I think that's mostly due to a different mix. Vinyl is inferior to CD as far as the technical specifications go, so the difference can, objectively, only be in the mix or the mastering decisions.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: January 26 2010 at 03:42
WHATEVER.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Wink
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: January 26 2010 at 10:07
Originally posted by mystic fred mystic fred wrote:

CD 's have been superceded by downloaded MP3's and are now obsolete - they were never intended to be audiophile quality, despite the claims, they were just another marketing ploy.
 
Vinyl is enjoying a resurgence as many find the quality of the sound vastly superior to digital technology, but steer well clear of those USB turntables, they are rubbish - a good quality vinyl system of used gear  could be easily put together  for around 400 GBP, and the results will astound you.  check out this site...
 
 
Smile
  Ha Ha Ha. There's a saying or old adage " he who laughs last, laughs the loudest". CDs had just gained momentum after I had came out of the air force during which time I had little time for my album collection. I held steadfast and refused to start buying CDs or a CD player until 1998 or 99. Poeple laughed at me . Family members shunned me. I was cut out of the family will. The dogs and cats wouldn't even aknowledge my presence. It was a lonely place and time.

Just kiddingBig smile But people thought I was nuts holding on to my 5,000 or so albums as well as two turntables that I have held on to, one from 1980 and the other one an old Dual that could even be from the sixties. There's a local specialist store where I have them serviced and updated and my music sounds just as good as it did back in 1975!

I knew CDs wouldn't last. People just wouldn't listen. And now with all this new crap the recording arts are in jeopardy. Music is crap today. I was just out for a few beers with and old friend from high school the other day and he reflected that music died when Led Zep disbanded. A bit of a generalization but I tend to take his point figuratively. Technology has killed the arts. I'm glad that I still have my jewels from trhe seventies to cherish. I've even met people in second hand stores who are trying to buy their own vinyl back!


Edited by Vibrationbaby - January 26 2010 at 10:10
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: January 26 2010 at 10:49
Originally posted by Certif1ed Certif1ed wrote:

WHATEVER.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Wink


You've spoken fondly of MP3s (mostly) and turntables with USB connectors ... and I think you're knowledgeable when it comes to audio technology. Do you honestly believe that a pressing of Led Zeppelin II that you really like is so good because it's on vinyl - or because they simply nailed the mixing and (in this case) mastering?

Just saying.Tongue
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: January 26 2010 at 14:31
Originally posted by Mr ProgFreak Mr ProgFreak wrote:

Originally posted by Certif1ed Certif1ed wrote:

WHATEVER.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Wink


You've spoken fondly of MP3s (mostly) and turntables with USB connectors ... and I think you're knowledgeable when it comes to audio technology. Do you honestly believe that a pressing of Led Zeppelin II that you really like is so good because it's on vinyl - or because they simply nailed the mixing and (in this case) mastering?

Just saying.Tongue
 
Mixing and Mastering are the direct responsables of the quality of the sound (if you have a decent recording, of course). The only way vynils sounds better than the digital storage is because there's not filtrations and modification that is what digital process do and the original mix is free of less subjective interference... but what "sounds better" is very subjective... I like it to be a little raw and with the bass a little low, but of course, it doesn't apply to any style and it depends of the producer ears mostly...
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: January 26 2010 at 14:47
^ But actually a lot of processing is done when mastering for vinyl ... dampening low frequencies and boosting them during playback, for example. I think that merely digitizing the mix is a lot less intrusive - and ultimately more audiophile in the true sense of the word.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: January 26 2010 at 16:28
right but you still don't get the original audio boost from the pressing because the digital remaster is secondary, no?

assume the power 1586/14.3
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: January 26 2010 at 16:52
Originally posted by Mr ProgFreak Mr ProgFreak wrote:



You've spoken fondly of MP3s (mostly) and turntables with USB connectors ... and I think you're knowledgeable when it comes to audio technology. Do you honestly believe that a pressing of Led Zeppelin II that you really like is so good because it's on vinyl - or because they simply nailed the mixing and (in this case) mastering?

Just saying.Tongue
 
I'm not fond of mp3, except for the portability aspect - I've never heard a good one!
 
My turntable is a Project - a company that know a thing about record decks, even budget ones - I haven't heard the other USB turntables - who knows, maybe mystic fred is right about them, but he's dead wrong about the Project.
 
It sounds very good into a regular HiFi.
 
The other way it sounds pretty good is when you make a 24-bit WAV recording of a vinyl - I've done a test on an audiophile friend of mine at work - maybe you remember? In a "blind" test, he preferred the 24-bit WAV of the vinyl over the 16 bit version, which in turn he preferred to the CD.
 
I do not honestly know why vinyl sounds better to my ears and to those of other vinylholics (although there are some good arguments out there) - I can see that most scientific data says it should be otherwise and I understand the data. What I also understand is what my ears tell me, which is the opposite!
 
 
Originally posted by mystic fred mystic fred wrote:

...steer well clear of those USB turntables, they are rubbish - a good quality vinyl system of used gear  could be easily put together  for around 400 GBP, and the results will astound you.  check out this site...
 
 
Actually, my turntable does not sound "rubbish" to me, and I consider my system to be of a good quality overall. The results often astound me.
 
Have you heard every USB turntable and done a side-by-side comparison with a non-USB version?
 
Originally posted by Mr ProgFreak Mr ProgFreak wrote:

^ But actually a lot of processing is done when mastering for vinyl ... dampening low frequencies and boosting them during playback, for example. I think that merely digitizing the mix is a lot less intrusive - and ultimately more audiophile in the true sense of the word.
 
Originally posted by halabalushindigus halabalushindigus wrote:

right but you still don't get the original audio boost from the pressing because the digital remaster is secondary, no?
 
Mastering for an analogue lathe in order to cut a vinyl disc is a completely different process to a fully digital system.
 
You have to be really careful with bass frequencies especially, or you can render the walls of the vinyl so thin that the needle goes through.
 
This is second-hand, vaguely remembered information - there's info on some of the better audiophile sites, like Steve Hoffman's, but I don't have time to trawl it right now!
 
A digital remaster is just that - a remaster of a source. If you're lucky, the source is the original master tape. If not, it could be a 2nd generation, in which case it'll definitely sound lacking, no matter how good the digital process, or worse, mastered from a vinyl copy.
 
No matter how accurate the digital process is, you can't put back stuff that isn't there, and to my ears, most digital remasters have too much gain to compensate for the additional compression. The sound is brittle and lacking in dynamic and tone...
 
But I'll freely admit that could just be me having a completely irrational bias for vinyl.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: January 26 2010 at 17:33
Originally posted by Certif1ed Certif1ed wrote:

Originally posted by Mr ProgFreak Mr ProgFreak wrote:



You've spoken fondly of MP3s (mostly) and turntables with USB connectors ... and I think you're knowledgeable when it comes to audio technology. Do you honestly believe that a pressing of Led Zeppelin II that you really like is so good because it's on vinyl - or because they simply nailed the mixing and (in this case) mastering?

Just saying.Tongue
 
I'm not fond of mp3, except for the portability aspect - I've never heard a good one!
 
My turntable is a Project - a company that know a thing about record decks, even budget ones - I haven't heard the other USB turntables - who knows, maybe mystic fred is right about them, but he's dead wrong about the Project.
 
It sounds very good into a regular HiFi.
 
The other way it sounds pretty good is when you make a 24-bit WAV recording of a vinyl - I've done a test on an audiophile friend of mine at work - maybe you remember? In a "blind" test, he preferred the 24-bit WAV of the vinyl over the 16 bit version, which in turn he preferred to the CD.
 
I do not honestly know why vinyl sounds better to my ears and to those of other vinylholics (although there are some good arguments out there) - I can see that most scientific data says it should be otherwise and I understand the data. What I also understand is what my ears tell me, which is the opposite!
 
 
Originally posted by mystic fred mystic fred wrote:

...steer well clear of those USB turntables, they are rubbish - a good quality vinyl system of used gear  could be easily put together  for around 400 GBP, and the results will astound you.  check out this site...
 
 
Actually, my turntable does not sound "rubbish" to me, and I consider my system to be of a good quality overall. The results often astound me.
 
Have you heard every USB turntable and done a side-by-side comparison with a non-USB version?
 
Originally posted by Mr ProgFreak Mr ProgFreak wrote:

^ But actually a lot of processing is done when mastering for vinyl ... dampening low frequencies and boosting them during playback, for example. I think that merely digitizing the mix is a lot less intrusive - and ultimately more audiophile in the true sense of the word.
 
Originally posted by halabalushindigus halabalushindigus wrote:

right but you still don't get the original audio boost from the pressing because the digital remaster is secondary, no?
 
Mastering for an analogue lathe in order to cut a vinyl disc is a completely different process to a fully digital system.
 
You have to be really careful with bass frequencies especially, or you can render the walls of the vinyl so thin that the needle goes through.
 
This is second-hand, vaguely remembered information - there's info on some of the better audiophile sites, like Steve Hoffman's, but I don't have time to trawl it right now!
 
A digital remaster is just that - a remaster of a source. If you're lucky, the source is the original master tape. If not, it could be a 2nd generation, in which case it'll definitely sound lacking, no matter how good the digital process, or worse, mastered from a vinyl copy.
 
No matter how accurate the digital process is, you can't put back stuff that isn't there, and to my ears, most digital remasters have too much gain to compensate for the additional compression. The sound is brittle and lacking in dynamic and tone...
 
But I'll freely admit that could just be me having a completely irrational bias for vinyl.
no irrational bias for vinyl, it just sounds better

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: January 27 2010 at 01:38
Originally posted by Certif1ed Certif1ed wrote:

Originally posted by Mr ProgFreak Mr ProgFreak wrote:



You've spoken fondly of MP3s (mostly) and turntables with USB connectors ... and I think you're knowledgeable when it comes to audio technology. Do you honestly believe that a pressing of Led Zeppelin II that you really like is so good because it's on vinyl - or because they simply nailed the mixing and (in this case) mastering?

Just saying.Tongue
 
I'm not fond of mp3, except for the portability aspect - I've never heard a good one!
 
My turntable is a Project - a company that know a thing about record decks, even budget ones - I haven't heard the other USB turntables - who knows, maybe mystic fred is right about them, but he's dead wrong about the Project.
 
It sounds very good into a regular HiFi.
 
The other way it sounds pretty good is when you make a 24-bit WAV recording of a vinyl - I've done a test on an audiophile friend of mine at work - maybe you remember? In a "blind" test, he preferred the 24-bit WAV of the vinyl over the 16 bit version, which in turn he preferred to the CD.
 
I do not honestly know why vinyl sounds better to my ears and to those of other vinylholics (although there are some good arguments out there) - I can see that most scientific data says it should be otherwise and I understand the data. What I also understand is what my ears tell me, which is the opposite!
 


Well, you are using MP3 for some purposes and enjoying listening to it ... most of the other audiophiles that I've met here despise compressed audio and CD is as far as they are willing to go.

I agree about 24 bit ... it's a big improvement, provided of course that the source is of a comparable quality in terms of dynamic bandwidth. Have you listened to recent productions by Steven Wilson? He's obsessed with audio quality ... Smile

Originally posted by Certif1ed Certif1ed wrote:


  
Originally posted by Mr ProgFreak Mr ProgFreak wrote:

^ But actually a lot of processing is done when mastering for vinyl ... dampening low frequencies and boosting them during playback, for example. I think that merely digitizing the mix is a lot less intrusive - and ultimately more audiophile in the true sense of the word.
 
Originally posted by halabalushindigus halabalushindigus wrote:

right but you still don't get the original audio boost from the pressing because the digital remaster is secondary, no?
 
Mastering for an analogue lathe in order to cut a vinyl disc is a completely different process to a fully digital system.
 
You have to be really careful with bass frequencies especially, or you can render the walls of the vinyl so thin that the needle goes through.
 
This is second-hand, vaguely remembered information - there's info on some of the better audiophile sites, like Steve Hoffman's, but I don't have time to trawl it right now!
 
A digital remaster is just that - a remaster of a source. If you're lucky, the source is the original master tape. If not, it could be a 2nd generation, in which case it'll definitely sound lacking, no matter how good the digital process, or worse, mastered from a vinyl copy.
 
No matter how accurate the digital process is, you can't put back stuff that isn't there, and to my ears, most digital remasters have too much gain to compensate for the additional compression. The sound is brittle and lacking in dynamic and tone...
 
But I'll freely admit that could just be me having a completely irrational bias for vinyl.


All these problems are not something that the digital format is to blame for. CD, 24bit/96khz, SACD ... you can use these formats to store music that's perfect to audiophile ears. It's all choices made during the mixing/mastering stages that ruin these recordings for you. Hence my question above: Have you listened to recend SW high-def productions?
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: January 27 2010 at 03:35
Originally posted by Mr ProgFreak Mr ProgFreak wrote:



Well, you are using MP3 for some purposes and enjoying listening to it ... most of the other audiophiles that I've met here despise compressed audio and CD is as far as they are willing to go.
 
 
I don't consider myself an audiophile - I'm a musician!
 
I like good sounding music, and obviously will choose what I think is best to listen to.
 
At the end of the day, it's the MUSIC that matters, not the reproduction method, mixing, mastering, playing skill or any other nonsense.
 
Good music speaks for itself, and a performer that finds the soul of the music will always delight, no matter how crappy the sound system.
 
I've heard some awesome music on the old wax cylinder and shellac (pre-vinyl) formats - but they're not exatcly hi-fidelity!
 
I've also heard Master tapes (the original 24-track reels, which you CANNOT improve, only modify) of such albums as Dark Side of the Moon, through a professional recording studio monitors - Yamaha NS-10 Nearfields and then ATC SCM 300s:
 
These are considered even by studio engineers to be seriously good speakers.
 
The amps were Crown DC300s for the low end and Crown DC150s for the top end, with an EMC crossover.
 
Good kit, with an authoritative source.
 
  
Originally posted by Mr ProgFreak Mr ProgFreak wrote:

 
All these problems are not something that the digital format is to blame for. CD, 24bit/96khz, SACD ... you can use these formats to store music that's perfect to audiophile ears. It's all choices made during the mixing/mastering stages that ruin these recordings for you. Hence my question above: Have you listened to recend SW high-def productions?
 
I'm not blaming the digital format for anything - like I said, I am not yer typical audiophile who reckons that only vintage or seriously expensive analog kit can cut the mustard - but I've yet to hear digital kit that sounds better to me than the best analog kit I've heard.
 
I suppose it's possible to remaster (remixing is not commonly done, as far as I know, unless the band really want to go through all that again) a digital recording using exactly the same settings as you'd use for vinyl - but there would be no point.
 
All that would happen is that you'd lose digital's advantage of being able to cope with a greater frequency range (vinyl hass to have the bass rolled off around 50db, IIRC - certainly 30, and high frequencies arounfd 16k, because of limitations in the vinyl material itself - even tape has frequency limitations - while digital can take all the bass and treble, because it's only bits.
 
This starts to break up in regions that scientists tell us we can't hear - and I respond "I bloody well can hear in those ranges!". A broken CRT computer monitor whistles at an extremely high pitch, and I hear it, while most of my workmates do not.
 
 
Possibly, what makes the vinyl listening experience is the warm abience - the subtle yet ever present noise of a diamond stylus rubbing against whatever polymer vinly blend is used.
 
I dunno.
 
I'm guessing.
 
All I know is that MOST vinyl sounds better to me than any digital media I've heard to date, with the possible exception of the 24-bit remaster of Marillion's "Script for a Jester's Tear".
 
And I have the SACD/DVD remasters of all the first Genesis albums as one of my references... Smile
 
 
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: January 27 2010 at 03:52
^ my recommendation to you: The recently released re-mixed and re-mastered King Crimson albums (ItCotCK and Red). (CD, DVD 5.1+Stereo)Smile

And as far as this is concerned:

Originally posted by Certif1ed Certif1ed wrote:


but I've yet to hear digital kit that sounds better to me than the best analog kit I've heard


I think it's missing the point. Why should a digital kit be able to sound better than the best analog kit? The differences between such systems are so small ... and both digital and analog systems can only re-produce the original recording as accurately as possible, they - like you also said - can't enhance it. The point about (modern) digital systems is that even low cost CD players can offer great quality - simply because the information can be extracted from the medium much more easily (and reliably).


Edited by Mr ProgFreak - January 27 2010 at 03:57
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: January 27 2010 at 09:17
To prove that vinyl still rules I will play my old Led Zeppelin record Led Zeppelin III on my old Dual turntable. Then I will give it a new review. 
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