Vinyl
Printed From: Progarchives.com
Category: Other music related lounges
Forum Name: Tech Talk
Forum Description: Discuss musical instruments, equipment, hi-fi, speakers, vinyl, gadgets,etc.
URL: http://www.progarchives.com/forum/forum_posts.asp?TID=64277
Printed Date: November 21 2024 at 22:50 Software Version: Web Wiz Forums 11.01 - http://www.webwizforums.com
Topic: Vinyl
Posted By: bsms810
Subject: Vinyl
Date Posted: January 11 2010 at 18:12
Not sure this is the correct place for this but.....
im big into my prog these days, especially the 70s stuff. I am also a mere 26 years old. I have therefore never owned an old record player, only cds (gasp!). I was wanting peoples opinions on the difference in listening to these old records as they were intended compared to on CD, For example ive always wanted to hear Thick as a Brick on vinyl..... Is it worth my time getting a record player? or just stick to getting CDs? Thanks for any replies
------------- 'when was the last time you had a girlfriend?'
'I dont look at it as when, I look at it as who...and why' - David Brent
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Replies:
Posted By: moshkito
Date Posted: January 11 2010 at 18:32
Hi,
I say get the CD ... I'm on the way to about 1200 LP's from 2500 originally ... and I am not a collector ... I only have what I love ... end of story.
To my way of seeing it, a lot of these gimmicks, are just commercial efforts and if you are a music lover, the gimmicks are not needed and you can get away from them.
That's the way I think though ... it's almost like saying that the music is not worth collecting if it had a Hignosis cover, and I can tell you that was not true at all ... from the strangest to the weirdest ... it was all tops ... and some stuff was magnificent and then some ... but to me this was what "art" was about and "expression" ... and these days, in a board like this, there are too many commerical pundits that love to go around saying something is not this or that ... because it is not listed in the top ten, or because it does not have the mandatory 74/69 time required on the verse after the chorus that makes up someone's definiton ... or the one I just saw on Bass Player magazine, just to give you an idea how stupid it can get .... "the minor chords that define jazz ... " like minor chords have not been a part of any other music ... EVER ... I doubt that person has ever heard anything else in his life! See?
I say you go for the music ... and unlike the LP's ... CD's are getting a lot more material out there than LP's ever did ... though in the beginning rock and long cuts and experimental musics still had a place for it to come out ... today they do, by themselves and there is no promotion to help you find it ... and in many ways you do not want someone to tell you any of this ... music is best when you can come to it on your own ... an dlearn it by yourself.
It's about you ... so if you want to "collect" ... fine ... hope you make enough money! ... but most of those people out there are not about the music and they never were. And there are a couple of things that someone has offered me big money for ... but man ... I guess that I am a stupid sentimental fool ... the music in those is so special to me ... I can't even say yes to getting rid of the LP.
------------- Music is not just for listening ... it is for LIVING ... you got to feel it to know what's it about! Not being told! www.pedrosena.com
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Posted By: bsms810
Date Posted: January 12 2010 at 06:30
Thank you for your thoughts. I guess there is an elemant of 'collector' in wanting to own the vinyls, but from what you've said it makes sense that, if you love the music, to acquire that music in whatever format available, and if you happen to have a cd player, get em on CD if this is easiest... it's the music rather than the gimmick of the format.
Haha it seems to me that you have an elemant of both sides... as you cant bare to part with your more prized ones.... I can certainly see where you are coming from.
------------- 'when was the last time you had a girlfriend?'
'I dont look at it as when, I look at it as who...and why' - David Brent
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Posted By: Mr ProgFreak
Date Posted: January 12 2010 at 07:09
My advice:
1. Get yourself an affordable record player (preferable with USB interface and software to rip and transfer albums) and buy LPs in thrift stores 2. Buy the remastered editions of some of the albums as MP3
Don't listen to people who claim that MP3 sounds inferior. With the appropriate bitrate MP3 sounds just as good as the original, and all the current stores use these bitrates. Let me give you an example:
http://www.amazon.com/Thick-As-A-Brick/dp/B000T1GKH2/ref=sr_shvl_album_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1263301603&sr=301-1 - http://www.amazon.com/Thick-As-A-Brick/dp/B000T1GKH2/ref=sr_shvl_album_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1263301603&sr=301-1
Currently priced at $6.99, and you get the 1997 remaster plus all the bonus tracks. This leaves you (compared to the CD) enough money to also buy a used copy of the vinyl LP, and you get both worlds.
BTW: My personal opinion is that new remasters (90s and newer) almost always sound better than the vinyls. So if you're mostly interested in the music and not in the collector's value, I'd recommend to buy MP3s only.
------------- https://tagyourmusic.org/users/Mike" rel="nofollow - https://tagyourmusic.org/users/Mike
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Posted By: chopper
Date Posted: January 12 2010 at 07:36
I reckon some prog LPs would be worth buying on vinyl and TAAB is one that springs to mind for the cover. I don't own it on CD but I suspect the CD cover may not contain all the information on the vinyl edition. This is certainly the case for "Olias of Sunhillow" where the vinyl has the booklet with the story to the album and the CD only has the outside pages.
And of course the artwork is much bigger on the vinyl editions. I would buy the vinyl version of Yessongs for the Roger Dean cover alone (if I didn't already have it).
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Posted By: idiotPrayer
Date Posted: January 12 2010 at 08:03
Hey I'm just a teen but I still by vinyls. I'm not claming that they have a better sound, but certainly a different one, that goes better with some music. +Sometimes rare records get realeased on vilyl only.
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Posted By: octopus-4
Date Posted: January 12 2010 at 08:32
A Vinyl was nice to take in your hands, looking at the cover's details while you were listening to the music. The shape of the tracks was visible. You was able to understand if it was a slow and calm or a fast and heavy track just looking at them on the disc. Some booklets, in particular Rick Wakeman's early albums were very impressive. The CD is a different kind of object. It's as "warm" as an mp3. The cover is just a picture, and it's not possible to put inside it a newspaper like on Thick as a brick. Also, when CDs appeared in the market, the physical support was cheaper, but CDs were more expensive... I hate CDs since then. The sound has too much "dynamics" respect to the vinyl. It's good for electronic music, but bad for acoustic instruments that are quite "innatural". However, CD is quite dead as well as vinyl. Flash RAMs are the present and YouTube stuff is going to be the future. Very bad.
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Posted By: Mr ProgFreak
Date Posted: January 12 2010 at 08:55
chopper wrote:
I reckon some prog LPs would be worth buying on vinyl and TAAB is one that springs to mind for the cover. I don't own it on CD but I suspect the CD cover may not contain all the information on the vinyl edition. This is certainly the case for "Olias of Sunhillow" where the vinyl has the booklet with the story to the album and the CD only has the outside pages.
And of course the artwork is much bigger on the vinyl editions. I would buy the vinyl version of Yessongs for the Roger Dean cover alone (if I didn't already have it). |
That's a good point - and it's also what I've been doing for a while now. I buy less vinyl albums and focus on those with interesting artwork.
------------- https://tagyourmusic.org/users/Mike" rel="nofollow - https://tagyourmusic.org/users/Mike
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Posted By: bsms810
Date Posted: January 12 2010 at 09:48
Yes i have heard that the TAAB newspaper is something to behold, altho the CD version i think contains all the info, it isn't quite the same. And yes the Yes covers are beautiful, prob worth seeing those in large. Thank you for your posts I shall consider my options based on the useful tips
------------- 'when was the last time you had a girlfriend?'
'I dont look at it as when, I look at it as who...and why' - David Brent
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Posted By: TheGazzardian
Date Posted: January 12 2010 at 09:57
I've recently started vinyl collecting due to receiving a large amount of used vinyls as a gift. And one thing I've noticed is that almost all of them have problems ... pops, cracks, distortion, just from being stored for years. When shopping for records, you have to know how to spot this without playing the record to ensure that you're going to get an album that isn't full of artifacts. So for me, getting a record, while really cool, always has a level of risk to it. This is more so when I'm buying music online, because a lot of older records can only be grabbed used, and you have to rely on the seller to represent their music properly. So, for convenience and stability's sake, I find that I still prefer the CD.
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Posted By: FusionKing
Date Posted: January 12 2010 at 10:40
I'm 18 years old, however there was only vinyl (and a small number of tapes) in my house until I was 13 and I still use vinyl regularly. The difference is that CD's are good for convenience and creating compilations of the songs you are most likely to listen to through computers, however, vinyl gives a ritualistic approach to playing a record where one sets the record up to play very carefully and listening to the music intently as the nature of playing vinyl makes it less likely for one to skip through tracks hurriedly.
I find that vinyl, although it crackles with dust and scratches with age, has a fuller sound and often songs sound slightly faster on vinyl than they do on CD simply as a result of the technolgies being somewhat different from each other. Also, most of the vinyls will not be remasters, so you may find that in some cases the songs have extra parts within them that have been removed or changed at a later date. For example I owned a copy of Ozzy Osbourne's Blizzard Of Ozz on CD and on vinyl, the sound of the guitar and effects put on it were pretty different on the vinyl and also, the rythym section is entirely different on the vinyl because (I discovered at a later date) that because of some kind of legal dispute between the band members, the drums and bass work was rerecorded with another bassist and drummer, thus only the unremastered recordings have the original work, which as a matter of fact, I liked it just as much as the remaster. maybe in some ways the original is even better because you have something a bit different from everone else! Another thing which vinyl has in its favour, is the detail in which one can view the album art. It is far clearer and the greater scale of the vinyl allows for its cover art to make a much more accentuated statement to those who view it than its digital counterpart does. To give another example, it is a very different experience for one who examines the great gatefold cover of Pink Floyd's Dark Side Of The Moon on vinyl with every detail of the songs and the album before you with the rainbow heart monitor motif running though the middle of the sleeve in comparison to one who gets the CD copy who reads the liner notes as they would a little book. The latter can still have you engrossed, but it simply does not have the same impact on the viewer. Vinyl also can have some unexpected tidbits of album art waiting for you on the inner sleeve, the thin paper sleeve inside the album cover. I have noticed this alternative placement of art and/ or liner notes to be the case with some of my Def Leppard, Van Halen and Pearl Jam vinyls, just to name a few bands who have done this. And let's not forget picture discs and coloured vinyl specials, they are wonderful additions to the cabinet of any record collector. I say that it is always worth having a vinyl player in the home of any dedicated music fan and I hope this helps you make your decision.
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Posted By: Vompatti
Date Posted: January 12 2010 at 10:44
^ Ever heard of paragraphs?
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Posted By: Vibrationbaby
Date Posted: January 12 2010 at 10:53
bsms810 wrote:
Not sure this is the correct place for this but.....
im big into my prog these days, especially the 70s stuff. I am also a mere 26 years old. I have therefore never owned an old record player, only cds (gasp!). I was wanting peoples opinions on the difference in listening to these old records as they were intended compared to on CD, For example ive always wanted to hear Thick as a Brick on vinyl..... Is it worth my time getting a record player? or just stick to getting CDs? Thanks for any replies | Analogue recordings sound overproduced on anything but vinyl. Get rid of all your CDs, mp3s and go out and buy a record player. Vinyl is actually coming back. Actually it never died. I have all my vinyl from the 70s & 80s. Didn't even buy a CD player until 1997.
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Posted By: FusionKing
Date Posted: January 12 2010 at 10:57
I think you will find, Vompatti, that both paragaphing and the ability to summarise are not talents that I have.
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Posted By: Slartibartfast
Date Posted: January 12 2010 at 11:53
By the way, for those new to vinyl collecting you should rotate them. I had a bunch that were soaked in a recent house flood. They had been on the shelf and left alone for about 15 years. They will flatten a little on the bottom rim. One of my bosses decided to salvage them and noticed that.
On a side note, glass is also sort of a very slow moving liquid. Panes in a window will get thicker on the bottom and thinner at the top as time goes by.
------------- Released date are often when it it impacted you but recorded dates are when it really happened...
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Posted By: Matthew T
Date Posted: January 12 2010 at 13:32
Grab a turntable you will need it as some albums are still are not available on cd.
If you are buying old records check the surface for scratches ( Light ones will affect the sound and not jump) Deep ones the record is rooted. Make sure that they are level and have not warped and one other tip if the record is old there will most likely be grime in the grooves so a gentle wash through warm soapy water ( not hot you will damage it) with a sponge and get that grime out. Rinse them off and on the dishrack too dry. Sound quality will improve.
As for the sound differences I really do not care as cds are just as good these days and are a hell of a lot easier to maintain.
One other mention with new vinyl is often the same mix that is put on the cd is the same that goes on the vinyl recorded or scrubbed up digitally. Steve Barrow who ran the Blood and Fire reggae label was amazed at the complaints he had when releases were not vinyl and said it was the same master used for both.
A lot of that stuff was taken off singles that had to be cleaned up,
With the original old vinyl releases done in Analogue there is a difference.
You will need a record cleaning cloth and don't forget a soft tootbrush as you will get fluff building up around the needle (stylus) and that for me is the easiest way to get it off with out handling the needle. Always get diamond needles not sapphire as they only last about a 1/3 of a diamond.
And don't forget to keep them out of the sun and never leave them in cars they warp. The old trick of placing the record between two sheets of glass to straighten it if has warped does not work
Have fun I still like singles
------------- Matt
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Posted By: Vibrationbaby
Date Posted: January 12 2010 at 14:22
I love everything about vinyl. Taking them out of the sleeve with loving care. Looking at them when you first get them trying to figure out what they will sound like from the thickness of the grooves.Placing them on the turntable. Cueing the stylus. Watching it go around. Holding the cover while you listen to them. Reading the booklet. Best one I have is Jethro tull's hard cover 1972 Living In The Past album which opens into a 20 page book! Searching for that elusive album by that obscure group in record shops, flea markets, junk sales ( although this is a thing of the past with the age of the internet ) There is a mystique about vinyl. Vinyl albums are more personal I find.
One method I use to rmove gunk from the grooves is toothpaste although I'm sure that a lot of guys would advise against it but it has worked for me. A long haired freak who owned a record store showed me this one years ago.
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Posted By: Slartibartfast
Date Posted: January 12 2010 at 14:28
Vibrationbaby wrote:
I love everything about vinyl. Taking them out of the sleeve with loving care. Looking at them when you first get them trying to figure out what they will sound like from the thickness of the grooves.Placing them on the turntable. Cueing the stylus. Watching it go around. Holding the cover while you listen to them. Reading the booklet. Best one I have is Jethro tull's hard cover 1972 Living In The Past album which opens into a 20 page book! Searching for that elusive album by that obscure group in record shops, flea markets, junk sales ( although this is a thing of the past with the age of the internet ) There is a mystique about vinyl. Vinyl albums are more personal I find.
One method I use to rmove gunk from the grooves is toothpaste although I'm sure that a lot of guys would advise against it but it has worked for me. A long haired freak who owned a record store showed me this one years ago.
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Well, no doubt, vinyl is groovy.
I have a copy of that Living In The Past, too. The vinyl was screwed up but the rest is primo. Survived the flood.
They make really expensive vinyl cleaning machines by they way. Anyone have any experience with them and opinions/recommendations?
------------- Released date are often when it it impacted you but recorded dates are when it really happened...
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Posted By: Vibrationbaby
Date Posted: January 12 2010 at 14:49
Just Crest toothpaste. Warm water. Damp cloth. I'm not a fanatic.
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Posted By: bsms810
Date Posted: January 12 2010 at 14:52
Vibrationbaby wrote:
I love everything about vinyl. Taking them out of the sleeve with loving care. Looking at them when you first get them trying to figure out what they will sound like from the thickness of the grooves.Placing them on the turntable. Cueing the stylus. Watching it go around. Holding the cover while you listen to them. Reading the booklet. Best one I have is Jethro tull's hard cover 1972 Living In The Past album which opens into a 20 page book! Searching for that elusive album by that obscure group in record shops, flea markets, junk sales ( although this is a thing of the past with the age of the internet ) There is a mystique about vinyl. Vinyl albums are more personal I find.
One method I use to rmove gunk from the grooves is toothpaste although I'm sure that a lot of guys would advise against it but it has worked for me. A long haired freak who owned a record store showed me this one years ago.
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in a way you almost make me wish the internet was never invented.... When I first discovered TAAB, Selling England or Close to the Edge for example, It was like a new world of greatness, and i was instantly able to start my searches on the internet for other albums of the same era...It was so easy...but somehow too easy if you know what i mean, if the internet wasnt there i think it would have been genuinely exciting to shop in old record stores and eventually come across things that id been hunting for, it certainly would have staggered my prizes!
Well this has been very insightful for me, lots of great input, and not only have i had advice about whether to acquire an old player, but also advice on how to select and maintain any records i may purchase! so a hearty thanks to everyone
Mike
------------- 'when was the last time you had a girlfriend?'
'I dont look at it as when, I look at it as who...and why' - David Brent
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Posted By: halabalushindigus
Date Posted: January 12 2010 at 15:20
Vinyl has much better sound. Cds can be digitally remastered from all sorts of sources, enabling encoding of all sorts of noises. I just bought "McGear" on Cd. Its absolute rubbish! Even at low volumes the piano just oozes with static, whereas my LP sounds kick!.But then with records, they have to be maintained because of the inevitable scratches, pops and skips. Buying a record player with a nice cartridge is a GOOD IDEA.
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assume the power 1586/14.3
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Posted By: WalterDigsTunes
Date Posted: January 12 2010 at 15:24
Why I dislike vinyl:
hisspophisspopcracklecracklepopSKIPSKIPhisspopcrackle
Why I like vinyl:
Cheap Big art It spins
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Posted By: himtroy
Date Posted: January 12 2010 at 18:46
Well, it's not really the fact that its on vinyl that makes it better, it's the original mix that does. That original mix is often only found on the vinyl though. What crushes the audio of CDs is the mass compression and the output being jacked all the way up. So I'd more so suggest trying to find non-remastered CDs than chasing after the vinyl, though I do enjoy my large vinyl collection.
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Posted By: Kestrel
Date Posted: January 12 2010 at 18:53
WalterDigsTunes wrote:
Why I dislike vinyl:
hisspophisspopcracklecracklepopSKIPSKIPhisspopcrackle
Why I like vinyl:
Cheap Big art It spins
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I agree with your "why I like" reasons. However it seems new vinyl is pretty expensive, although I did buy a 2xLP by Chromeo with free shipping (post-disco/funk) for $16 on Amazon, but bought Zombi's 2004 LP for $24 with shipping. Kinda sucks.
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Posted By: jammun
Date Posted: January 12 2010 at 22:19
Slartibartfast wrote:
By the way, for those new to vinyl collecting you should rotate them. I had a bunch that were soaked in a recent house flood. They had been on the shelf and left alone for about 15 years. They will flatten a little on the bottom rim. One of my bosses decided to salvage them and noticed that.
On a side note, glass is also sort of a very slow moving liquid. Panes in a window will get thicker on the bottom and thinner at the top as time goes by. |
Slarti, please tell me this is one of your posts. Because I'm not about to start rotating my 1000 LP's on any sort of regular basis. F*ck, might as well get a bunch of hens and turn eggs in an incubator. And plastic is plastic. This means my CD's are also slowly, almost in geologic time, forming large puddles at the bottom. I've got a Bachman Turner Overdrive album I haven't listened to in 20 years hanging about. Let me verify.
------------- Can you tell me where we're headin'?
Lincoln County Road or Armageddon.
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Posted By: clarke2001
Date Posted: January 13 2010 at 01:20
Slartibartfast wrote:
By the way, for those new to vinyl collecting you should rotate them. I had a bunch that were soaked in a recent house flood. They had been on the shelf and left alone for about 15 years. They will flatten a little on the bottom rim. One of my bosses decided to salvage them and noticed that.
On a side note, glass is also sort of a very slow moving liquid. Panes in a window will get thicker on the bottom and thinner at the top as time goes by.
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Err, http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Glass - no .
------------- https://japanskipremijeri.bandcamp.com/album/perkusije-gospodine" rel="nofollow - Percussion, sir!
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Posted By: Slartibartfast
Date Posted: January 13 2010 at 05:27
clarke2001 wrote:
Slartibartfast wrote:
By the way, for those new to vinyl collecting you should rotate them. I had a bunch that were soaked in a recent house flood. They had been on the shelf and left alone for about 15 years. They will flatten a little on the bottom rim. One of my bosses decided to salvage them and noticed that.
On a side note, glass is also sort of a very slow moving liquid. Panes in a window will get thicker on the bottom and thinner at the top as time goes by.
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Err, http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Glass - no .
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Uhm, which part? http://math.ucr.edu/home/baez/physics/General/Glass/glass.html - http://math.ucr.edu/home/baez/physics/General/Glass/glass.html This sort of backs you up on the glass thing. Then we can agree it's an amorphous solid.
------------- Released date are often when it it impacted you but recorded dates are when it really happened...
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Posted By: chopper
Date Posted: January 13 2010 at 05:39
"It is sometimes said that glass in very old churches is thicker at the bottom than at the top because glass is a liquid, and so over several centuries it has flowed towards the bottom. This is not true."
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Posted By: clarke2001
Date Posted: January 13 2010 at 05:44
Slartibartfast wrote:
clarke2001 wrote:
Slartibartfast wrote:
By the way, for those new to vinyl collecting you should rotate them. I had a bunch that were soaked in a recent house flood. They had been on the shelf and left alone for about 15 years. They will flatten a little on the bottom rim. One of my bosses decided to salvage them and noticed that.
On a side note, glass is also sort of a very slow moving liquid. Panes in a window will get thicker on the bottom and thinner at the top as time goes by.
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Err, http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Glass - no .
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Uhm, which part? http://math.ucr.edu/home/baez/physics/General/Glass/glass.html - http://math.ucr.edu/home/baez/physics/General/Glass/glass.html This sort of backs you up on the glass thing. Then we can agree it's an amorphous solid.
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Honestly, I don't know. It seems logical that if glass, which is solid state of matter, doesn't behave like a liquid, the same should apply for polyvinyl chloride molecules. I might be wrong though. I'm tempted to ask http://www.straightdope.com/ - this guy ...
------------- https://japanskipremijeri.bandcamp.com/album/perkusije-gospodine" rel="nofollow - Percussion, sir!
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Posted By: halabalushindigus
Date Posted: January 13 2010 at 10:06
Is that a picture of Tesla?
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assume the power 1586/14.3
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Posted By: Slartibartfast
Date Posted: January 13 2010 at 10:13
I wasn't making it up, the vinyl did go a little flat. Maybe by not more than a 1/32" on the bottom edge but it was noticeable. I haven't checked out my top of the shelf records yet. I'll report back in when I get a moment to inspect them. The storage location at the house was fairly even in temperature. The storage unit where I have my top shelf LPs is conditioned. But if the bottom edge flattened a little, who knows about the whole disc? When my top boss attempts playback, I will also report back....
------------- Released date are often when it it impacted you but recorded dates are when it really happened...
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Posted By: Nightfly
Date Posted: January 13 2010 at 17:48
Slartibartfast wrote:
Vibrationbaby wrote:
I love everything about vinyl. Taking them out of the sleeve with loving care. Looking at them when you first get them trying to figure out what they will sound like from the thickness of the grooves.Placing them on the turntable. Cueing the stylus. Watching it go around. Holding the cover while you listen to them. Reading the booklet. Best one I have is Jethro tull's hard cover 1972 Living In The Past album which opens into a 20 page book! Searching for that elusive album by that obscure group in record shops, flea markets, junk sales ( although this is a thing of the past with the age of the internet ) There is a mystique about vinyl. Vinyl albums are more personal I find.
One method I use to rmove gunk from the grooves is toothpaste although I'm sure that a lot of guys would advise against it but it has worked for me. A long haired freak who owned a record store showed me this one years ago.
|
Well, no doubt, vinyl is groovy.
I have a copy of that Living In The Past, too. The vinyl was screwed up but the rest is primo. Survived the flood.
They make really expensive vinyl cleaning machines by they way. Anyone have any experience with them and opinions/recommendations?
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A friend of mine sells records for a lving on ebay and he invested in one of those vinyl cleaning machines. You appy a few drop of liquid, brush it in and allow it to rotate while is sucks all the rubbish out the grooves. I bought a copy of Living In the Past off ebay and the seller had really overatted the condition as it looked filthy. I put it on my mates machine and it came up looking almost new and played much better. Of course it wont work miracles and get rid of scratches.
I think they're around 3 -4 hundred quid for a pro one though so unless you're really serious about vinyl probably not worth the money.
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Posted By: Certif1ed
Date Posted: January 19 2010 at 04:36
I'm an official member of Vinylholics Conspicuous...
For a first turntable, I'd recommend the Project Debut III USB - it's a proper turntable, but at a price that is extremely reasonable for what it is and does.
Purists wouldn't like it, as it has a built-in preamp - but this is a strength if the rest of your system is halfway modern, and lacks a phono input!
The other enormous strength is the USB bit - you plug it straight into your PC and create your own mp3s so you can listen to your vinyls on the go.
The biggest disadvantage with vinyl is storage. The other is tracking down particularly rare recordings - it's much easier to find CDs, and easier still to find mp3s of really hard to come by stuff.
The advantages are;
1) Sounds much better than any other music format except reel-to-reel. No arguments please.
2) Nice, BIG artwork.
3) It's still possible to buy a piece of vinyl in a second-hand shop and discover it's worth 100x what you paid for it - although I agree, with the Internet, people have wised up, and it's much harder than it used to be - but still, collecting vinyl can fund itself, in theory.
In practice, I find I tend to hang on to the really precious slabs...
When you first play a well-mastered Led Zep II on your turntable (and there are loads of different masterings out there, so beware!), you suddenly realise what heavy rock music is supposed to sound like - and Pink Floyd's "Dark Side of the Moon" does the same thing for Prog.
------------- The important thing is not to stop questioning.
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Posted By: Vibrationbaby
Date Posted: January 21 2010 at 09:43
I still have my two turntables from the seventies ( a Dual and a Micro Seiki ) and I still use them almost every day. I think my dogs even use them when I'm not home. They prefer vinyl and they were both born when CDs were in vogue !
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Posted By: Slartibartfast
Date Posted: January 21 2010 at 09:48
Vibrationbaby wrote:
I still have my two turntables from the seventies ( a Dual and a Micro Seiki ) and I still use them almost every day. I think my dogs even use them when I'm not home. They prefer vinyl and they were both born when CDs were in vogue !
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Your dogs, playing your records when you're not around? I'd be keeping a closer eye on them when you're not around.
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Posted By: mono
Date Posted: January 21 2010 at 10:34
halabalushindigus wrote:
Is that a picture of Tesla? |
Yes
------------- https://soundcloud.com/why-music Prog trio, from ambiant to violence
https://soundcloud.com/m0n0-film Film music and production projects
https://soundcloud.com/fadisaliba (almost) everything else
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Posted By: Vibrationbaby
Date Posted: January 21 2010 at 12:17
Slartibartfast wrote:
Vibrationbaby wrote:
I still have my two turntables from the seventies ( a Dual and a Micro Seiki ) and I still use them almost every day. I think my dogs even use them when I'm not home. They prefer vinyl and they were both born when CDs were in vogue !
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Your dogs, playing your records when you're not around? I'd be keeping a closer eye on them when you're not around.
| Well that's difficult because when I'm not around I'm usually not there to keep an eye on them. But I've got them trained to be very careful with their nails when removing them from the sleeve when I'm at home and actually supervising them so when I'm not there it doesn't worry me them playing the albums. I mean, it's better than them destroying the house while I'm not there. It's a chance I take.
-------------
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Posted By: Slartibartfast
Date Posted: January 21 2010 at 12:26
Vibrationbaby wrote:
Slartibartfast wrote:
Vibrationbaby wrote:
I still have my two turntables from the seventies ( a Dual and a Micro Seiki ) and I still use them almost every day. I think my dogs even use them when I'm not home. They prefer vinyl and they were both born when CDs were in vogue !
|
Your dogs, playing your records when you're not around? I'd be keeping a closer eye on them when you're not around.
| Well that's difficult because when I'm not around I'm usually not there to keep an eye on them. But I've got them trained to be very careful with their nails when removing them from the sleeve when I'm at home and actually supervising them so when I'm not there it doesn't worry me them playing the albums. I mean, it's better than them destroying the house while I'm not there. It's a chance I take.
|
it's tough having pets.
------------- Released date are often when it it impacted you but recorded dates are when it really happened...
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Posted By: halabalushindigus
Date Posted: January 21 2010 at 15:30
Aarf!!
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assume the power 1586/14.3
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Posted By: mono
Date Posted: January 22 2010 at 05:11
Get this for your pets!
------------- https://soundcloud.com/why-music Prog trio, from ambiant to violence
https://soundcloud.com/m0n0-film Film music and production projects
https://soundcloud.com/fadisaliba (almost) everything else
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Posted By: Jake Kobrin
Date 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!
------------- http://www.facebook.com/pages/Dr-Neil-Kobrin/244687105562746" rel="nofollow - SUPPORT MY FATHER AND BECOME A FAN
Jacob Kobrin Illustration
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Posted By: Vibrationbaby
Date Posted: January 23 2010 at 14:53
mono wrote:
Get this for your pets!
| My pets would have that thing torn to shreads in no time!
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Posted By: mystic fred
Date 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...
http://www.vinylengine.com/phpBB2/index.php - http://www.vinylengine.com/phpBB2/index.php
------------- Prog Archives Tour Van
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Posted By: Marty McFly
Date 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
------------- There's a point where "avant-garde" and "experimental" becomes "terrible" and "pointless,"
-Andyman1125 on Lulu
Even my
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Posted By: d.o.k
Date 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 ?
------------- my band : http://lgab.tk - http://lgab.tk
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Posted By: mono
Date Posted: January 25 2010 at 03:47
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.
------------- https://soundcloud.com/why-music Prog trio, from ambiant to violence
https://soundcloud.com/m0n0-film Film music and production projects
https://soundcloud.com/fadisaliba (almost) everything else
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Posted By: Certif1ed
Date Posted: January 25 2010 at 08:28
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 !
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Sounds good to me. Project make some good turntables.
d.o.k wrote:
At such prices no one can expect to have the full vinyl quality.
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"Full" vinyl quality?
It sounds pretty close to me
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.
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.
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...
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.
------------- The important thing is not to stop questioning.
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Posted By: Mr ProgFreak
Date 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.
------------- https://tagyourmusic.org/users/Mike" rel="nofollow - https://tagyourmusic.org/users/Mike
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Posted By: Certif1ed
Date Posted: January 26 2010 at 03:42
WHATEVER.
------------- The important thing is not to stop questioning.
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Posted By: Vibrationbaby
Date Posted: January 26 2010 at 10:07
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...
http://www.vinylengine.com/phpBB2/index.php - http://www.vinylengine.com/phpBB2/index.php
| 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 kidding 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!
-------------
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Posted By: Mr ProgFreak
Date Posted: January 26 2010 at 10:49
Certif1ed wrote:
WHATEVER.
|
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.
------------- https://tagyourmusic.org/users/Mike" rel="nofollow - https://tagyourmusic.org/users/Mike
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Posted By: jampa17
Date Posted: January 26 2010 at 14:31
Mr ProgFreak wrote:
Certif1ed wrote:
WHATEVER.
|
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.
|
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...
------------- Change the program inside... Stay in silence is a crime.
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Posted By: Mr ProgFreak
Date 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.
------------- https://tagyourmusic.org/users/Mike" rel="nofollow - https://tagyourmusic.org/users/Mike
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Posted By: halabalushindigus
Date 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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Posted By: Certif1ed
Date Posted: January 26 2010 at 16:52
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.
|
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!
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?
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. |
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.
------------- The important thing is not to stop questioning.
|
Posted By: halabalushindigus
Date Posted: January 26 2010 at 17:33
Certif1ed wrote:
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.
|
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!
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?
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. |
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
-------------
assume the power 1586/14.3
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Posted By: Mr ProgFreak
Date Posted: January 27 2010 at 01:38
Certif1ed wrote:
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.
|
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 ...
Certif1ed wrote:
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. |
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?
------------- https://tagyourmusic.org/users/Mike" rel="nofollow - https://tagyourmusic.org/users/Mike
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Posted By: Certif1ed
Date Posted: January 27 2010 at 03:35
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 http://www.audiogon.com/cgi-bin/cls.pl?spkrfull&1268057828 - 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.
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...
------------- The important thing is not to stop questioning.
|
Posted By: Mr ProgFreak
Date 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)
And as far as this is concerned:
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).
------------- https://tagyourmusic.org/users/Mike" rel="nofollow - https://tagyourmusic.org/users/Mike
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Posted By: Vibrationbaby
Date 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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Posted By: acdc7369
Date Posted: January 27 2010 at 19:29
The problem is not with the digital format itself, it's that so many CDs that you purchase in the store are not mastered the same way the vinyl LP of the same album is mastered. Every mastering engineer will make the final mix sound good on his system.
The remastering process is the biggest atrocity to ever happen to music. It is the record companies' attempts to give older recordings a more "modern" sound. The "modern" sound is over-compression (which results in loss in dynamics) in an attempt to make the sound more LOUD. It's an illusion, however: they really just make the originally loud dynamics as quiet as the rest of the music, and then turn the whole thing up. In fact, they turn it up SO much that they go past the theoretical digital maximum, thus inducing clipping on the CD source itself! This creates a very static-y sound, depending on how much they actually clipped. Clipped signals are also capable of damaging stereo equipment. Remastered CDs are just one large bar of noise and static that gets extremely fatiguing to the ear. It's happening on most modern recordings too, for at LEAST the past 20 years. In these cases, there is no question that the vinyl format is definitely superior: it doesn't carry a clipped signal! It astonishes me that clipping signals is actually considered acceptable by the record companies!
In my opinion, most early CDs sound much better than their remastered counterparts. But I still don't think (most of them) hold a candle to the vinyl format. Of course there are exceptions to the rule. I've heard people say that the reason people listen to vinyl is for nostalgia, and having clicks, pops, noise, etc. being a necessary part of the "vinyl experience". That's complete nonsense. Nothing drives me crazier than when I listen to a vinyl that has a bunch of noise and clicks and pops. I listen to it because I think it's the general case that it's mastered much better than any official CD counterpart in existence, and therefore higher quality.
Anyway, IMO vinyl rips are the way to go. It eliminates all the disadvantages to the digital format that have been abused by modern mastering engineers, as well as eliminating all the disadvantages of the analog format (wearing down). But it literally is case-by-case: some CDs sound better than the vinyl. If the CD is mastered well (most of them aren't), then it should sound better than the vinyl.
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Posted By: halabalushindigus
Date Posted: January 28 2010 at 00:46
acdc7369 wrote:
The problem is not with the digital format itself, it's that so many CDs that you purchase in the store are not mastered the same way the vinyl LP of the same album is mastered. Every mastering engineer will make the final mix sound good on his system.
The remastering process is the biggest atrocity to ever happen to music. It is the record companies' attempts to give older recordings a more "modern" sound. The "modern" sound is over-compression (which results in loss in dynamics) in an attempt to make the sound more LOUD. It's an illusion, however: they really just make the originally loud dynamics as quiet as the rest of the music, and then turn the whole thing up. In fact, they turn it up SO much that they go past the theoretical digital maximum, thus inducing clipping on the CD source itself! This creates a very static-y sound, depending on how much they actually clipped. Clipped signals are also capable of damaging stereo equipment. Remastered CDs are just one large bar of noise and static that gets extremely fatiguing to the ear. It's happening on most modern recordings too, for at LEAST the past 20 years. In these cases, there is no question that the vinyl format is definitely superior: it doesn't carry a clipped signal! It astonishes me that clipping signals is actually considered acceptable by the record companies!
In my opinion, most early CDs sound much better than their remastered counterparts. But I still don't think (most of them) hold a candle to the vinyl format. Of course there are exceptions to the rule. I've heard people say that the reason people listen to vinyl is for nostalgia, and having clicks, pops, noise, etc. being a necessary part of the "vinyl experience". That's complete nonsense. Nothing drives me crazier than when I listen to a vinyl that has a bunch of noise and clicks and pops. I listen to it because I think it's the general case that it's mastered much better than any official CD counterpart in existence, and therefore higher quality.
Anyway, IMO vinyl rips are the way to go. It eliminates all the disadvantages to the digital format that have been abused by modern mastering engineers, as well as eliminating all the disadvantages of the analog format (wearing down). But it literally is case-by-case: some CDs sound better than the vinyl. If the CD is mastered well (most of them aren't), then it should sound better than the vinyl.
| acdc7369- you know what you are talking about. Excellent information
-------------
assume the power 1586/14.3
|
Posted By: Mr ProgFreak
Date Posted: January 28 2010 at 01:40
acdc7369 wrote:
The problem is not with the digital format itself, it's that so many CDs that you purchase in the store are not mastered the same way the vinyl LP of the same album is mastered. Every mastering engineer will make the final mix sound good on his system.
The remastering process is the biggest atrocity to ever happen to music. It is the record companies' attempts to give older recordings a more "modern" sound. The "modern" sound is over-compression (which results in loss in dynamics) in an attempt to make the sound more LOUD. It's an illusion, however: they really just make the originally loud dynamics as quiet as the rest of the music, and then turn the whole thing up. In fact, they turn it up SO much that they go past the theoretical digital maximum, thus inducing clipping on the CD source itself! This creates a very static-y sound, depending on how much they actually clipped. Clipped signals are also capable of damaging stereo equipment. Remastered CDs are just one large bar of noise and static that gets extremely fatiguing to the ear. It's happening on most modern recordings too, for at LEAST the past 20 years. In these cases, there is no question that the vinyl format is definitely superior: it doesn't carry a clipped signal! It astonishes me that clipping signals is actually considered acceptable by the record companies!
In my opinion, most early CDs sound much better than their remastered counterparts. But I still don't think (most of them) hold a candle to the vinyl format. Of course there are exceptions to the rule. I've heard people say that the reason people listen to vinyl is for nostalgia, and having clicks, pops, noise, etc. being a necessary part of the "vinyl experience". That's complete nonsense. Nothing drives me crazier than when I listen to a vinyl that has a bunch of noise and clicks and pops. I listen to it because I think it's the general case that it's mastered much better than any official CD counterpart in existence, and therefore higher quality.
Anyway, IMO vinyl rips are the way to go. It eliminates all the disadvantages to the digital format that have been abused by modern mastering engineers, as well as eliminating all the disadvantages of the analog format (wearing down). But it literally is case-by-case: some CDs sound better than the vinyl. If the CD is mastered well (most of them aren't), then it should sound better than the vinyl.
|
I think that you have a point, but especially when it comes to Prog remasters you shouldn't dismiss all remasters as being bad, let alone "most" modern productions. Whenever I rip an album to mp3 I also calculate the "replay gain" in Winamp, and it's a reasonably good indicator of how loud the album is. I've analyzed more than 100 albums of 2009 this way, and I've found a variety of degrees of loudness. Specifically I've just checked the list: It's 133 albums, the loudest is Slayer's World Painted Blood (album replay gain -12,30dB), the least loud is Epignosis' Still the Waters (album replay gain -0,64dB), and the median is about -8dB (half of the albums are louder, the other half is less loud). -8dB is not very loud and doesn't suggest clipping (it's possible, but unlikely to be caused by artificial increase of loudness at this level of album replay gain).
------------- https://tagyourmusic.org/users/Mike" rel="nofollow - https://tagyourmusic.org/users/Mike
|
Posted By: Certif1ed
Date Posted: January 28 2010 at 05:53
This is the "loudness war" - and Mike is correct, it doesn't apply to all modern masters or remasters.
Certainly, in order to make the product compete with other products, a certain level of loudness must be achieved.
But don't forget that analog mastering used compression out of necessity because of the limitations of vinyl, and, since mastering is a process that takes many years, if not decades to perfect (I know - I've tried many, many times!), the average home recordist cannot expect to create a good master from a vinyl rip.
All you can hope for is a faithful digital reproduction, which will probably be a touch compressed, since out of necessity, you need to keep the levels down to keep the "spikes" - or compress it yourself. Ouch.
Clipping is obvious in a waveform opened in something like WavePad - you can see clearly the "shaved whiskers" as I like to call them, as the top of the wave form follows a bizzarre straight edge. This is most clearly seen with Metallica's "Death Magnetic".
Compare with my favourite CD remaster, Marillion's "Script for a Jester's Tear". Lots of mountain peaks and deep valleys, with "whiskers" a-plenty.
Not all digital recordings are victims of over compression and heavy handedness with the gain - studio engineers are aware of the issues, and I would think that most would prefer to create a nice product than subvert their art and create something as horrible sounding as "Death Magnetic"...
Of course, money talks.
My money goes to vinyl 98 times out of 100.
------------- The important thing is not to stop questioning.
|
Posted By: clarke2001
Date Posted: January 28 2010 at 08:08
Certif1ed wrote:
This is the "loudness war" - and Mike is correct, it doesn't apply to all modern masters or remasters.
Certainly, in order to make the product compete with other products, a certain level of loudness must be achieved.
But don't forget that analog mastering used compression out of necessity because of the limitations of vinyl, and, since mastering is a process that takes many years, if not decades to perfect (I know - I've tried many, many times!), the average home recordist cannot expect to create a good master from a vinyl rip.
All you can hope for is a faithful digital reproduction, which will probably be a touch compressed, since out of necessity, you need to keep the levels down to keep the "spikes" - or compress it yourself. Ouch.
Clipping is obvious in a waveform opened in something like WavePad - you can see clearly the "shaved whiskers" as I like to call them, as the top of the wave form follows a bizzarre straight edge. This is most clearly seen with Metallica's "Death Magnetic".
Compare with my favourite CD remaster, Marillion's "Script for a Jester's Tear". Lots of mountain peaks and deep valleys, with "whiskers" a-plenty.
Not all digital recordings are victims of over compression and heavy handedness with the gain - studio engineers are aware of the issues, and I would think that most would prefer to create a nice product than subvert their art and create something as horrible sounding as "Death Magnetic"...
Of course, money talks.
My money goes to vinyl 98 times out of 100.
|
I have a question for those who understand the subject:
Is it possible to revert the process? I mean, is it possible to make a waveform back to the smoothness, using distorted one as a source? Unless, of course, the source is totally deteriorated with bit-reducing and glitching.
I mean, it shouldn't be much of a problem for a software analysis to detect all the "cut tops" and simply apply the slope of the same steepness and make a sine or triangle wave. Of course, in case of steep (almost square) hills, the waveform will erratically jump to the loudness nightmare, but this can be avoided by carefully setting a threshold.
I know it will never be the same as an original source, because distortion covers and 'simplifies' complex waveforms. But it might be a good approximation...hmmm, perhaps a bit muffled?!?
EDIT: And I'm wondering if it's possible to do the similar thing with analog technology (perhaps by applying some sophisticated multi-mode filter that responds to dynamics) but I really doubt so.
------------- https://japanskipremijeri.bandcamp.com/album/perkusije-gospodine" rel="nofollow - Percussion, sir!
|
Posted By: Petrovsk Mizinski
Date Posted: January 28 2010 at 08:24
To de-brick wall audio is to defy physics, simply put
halabalushindigus wrote:
acdc7369- you know what you are
talking about. Excellent information |
Umm, no offense but he doesn't really. He's rehashing that same "OMG MASTERING BAD" argument that people do after they read a few articles on the internet about how limiting is killing everything and everyone. It's not true and it's a situation that's been blown out of proportion by everyone and their dog that feels the need to hop on the bandwagon of bashing modern day mastering to be "cool and trendy" and to feel better about themselves. Proper, well done mastering with heavy limiting and compression actually helps to bring forward lots of little nuances and details in the sound that would otherwise be lost on the listener, so to say remastering is an atrocity is just absurd quite frankly,
It also remains a fact that many modern records, remastered, or just simply stuff that was produced recently and released recently as new music, still retain a lot of dynamic range. It's a myth that today's music in general lacks dynamic, because it's not all like that. And some music (some death metal for example) is inherently undynamic anyway in its volume levels, and being mastered loud serves to fit the aesthetic. Some records, like Converge's "Jane Doe" for instance, in fact benefit from being severely smashed and clipping because it only heightens the artistic intent of the artist. The whole loudness wars thing has just been blown out of proportion by people with little understanding of audio and people that just believe what they are told. Listen with your ears rather than looking at waveforms. I can name PLENTY of modern records with heaps of dynamics (the last two Katatonia albums, all Paramore's albums on the songs that were written specifically with a lot of volume dynamics). There are also some records that went too far ("Planetary Duality" by The Faceless which pumps severely, or Hypocrisy's "Virus" album which is so severely smashed I can't get through more than about 2 songs without turning it out). That being said, I find limiting, compression and clipping all hugely useful tools for when I'm mixing, because it can help open up headroom, cut down piercing transients, keep low frequencies under control and make a mix easier to work with in general.
Another myth is that it's always the record companies want the loudness. Wrong. It's usually the clients that ask for it to be smashed. Sometimes mastering engineers receive mixes that are smashed before mastering even occurs (Death Magnetic is a prime example, with well known mastering engineer Ted Jensen himself being embarrassed to have been involved with the album)
Anyway, most of the sound we hear lies in the actual tracking process, editing and mixing anyway. The best job a mastering engineer can do is to keep things as transparent as possible (this assumes they have received a well tracked and mixed recording)
Also, eh, I don't find Steven Wilson's productions to be THAT amazing anyway. They sound good, undeniably, but no one in their right mind could really say they line up to a mix from Chris Lord-Alge, Randy Staub, Daniel Bergstrand, Jens Bogren , Andy Wallace or James Paul Wisner. There's only so much you can do with cheap Apogee converters and AFAIK little to no outboard gear and the fact unlike the aforementioned, he is also a musician and composer who doesn't quite have the time to learn as much about mixing as dedicated mix engineers.
|
Posted By: Mr ProgFreak
Date Posted: January 28 2010 at 08:28
I think that in this case the information that was removed is simply too complex to be interpolated. What's gone is gone ...
------------- https://tagyourmusic.org/users/Mike" rel="nofollow - https://tagyourmusic.org/users/Mike
|
Posted By: clarke2001
Date Posted: January 28 2010 at 09:11
Oh come on. Give me a yes!
You can't revert a cake back to the ingredients (chocolate , fruits, sugar etc) but if we're dealing with virtual reality, we should be able to re-synthesize it!!
By looking at the clipped one, it's obvious* it should be smooth in original shape - and it should be no big deal for a piece software to do an actual calculation - it's just math. Of course, the original might had had dozens of tiny spikes on the top of the hill, but even if it's true, the calculated estimation is better than a clipping loss. And perhaps even that problem can be solved - by analyzing a track and finding a similar curve (slope) that is preserved because it's below the clipping level and applying it to a clipped wave.
Hmmm...an idea worth of developing or utter nonsense
*okay, somewhat obvious. Since a clipping threshold is a constant horizontal value, it should be a good guess.
------------- https://japanskipremijeri.bandcamp.com/album/perkusije-gospodine" rel="nofollow - Percussion, sir!
|
Posted By: Petrovsk Mizinski
Date Posted: January 28 2010 at 09:19
You cannot de-brick wall audio. It is beyond the realms of physical possibility. People have tried to do it. It's about as effective as trying to make a perpetual motion machine.
|
Posted By: clarke2001
Date Posted: January 28 2010 at 09:37
But it's not physical!
Simply by pasting samples of preserved wave on the top of clipped ones you will get the result. Of course, it would be necessary to do all the possible permutations to get an acceptable result. If an average song contains 500000 amplitudes, the combination are a factorial of 500000, a fast processor should do it in less than several trillion year...okay, nevermind. Back to my cup of coffee.
I came up with a good idea, and it turned out the universe is too small for it. Damn.
------------- https://japanskipremijeri.bandcamp.com/album/perkusije-gospodine" rel="nofollow - Percussion, sir!
|
Posted By: Mr ProgFreak
Date Posted: January 28 2010 at 09:57
^ you could also try the following: Record something on the guitar through a slightly distorted guitar amp and then try to re-construct a clean signal.
Adding distortion to a recording destroys information ... it's as simple as that.
------------- https://tagyourmusic.org/users/Mike" rel="nofollow - https://tagyourmusic.org/users/Mike
|
Posted By: himtroy
Date Posted: January 28 2010 at 10:31
Petrovsk Mizinski wrote:
To de-brick wall audio is to defy physics, simply put
halabalushindigus wrote:
acdc7369- you know what you are
talking about. Excellent information |
Umm, no offense but he doesn't really. He's rehashing that same "OMG MASTERING BAD" argument that people do after they read a few articles on the internet about how limiting is killing everything and everyone. It's not true and it's a situation that's been blown out of proportion by everyone and their dog that feels the need to hop on the bandwagon of bashing modern day mastering to be "cool and trendy" and to feel better about themselves. Proper, well done mastering with heavy limiting and compression actually helps to bring forward lots of little nuances and details in the sound that would otherwise be lost on the listener, so to say remastering is an atrocity is just absurd quite frankly,
It also remains a fact that many modern records, remastered, or just simply stuff that was produced recently and released recently as new music, still retain a lot of dynamic range. It's a myth that today's music in general lacks dynamic, because it's not all like that. And some music (some death metal for example) is inherently undynamic anyway in its volume levels, and being mastered loud serves to fit the aesthetic. Some records, like Converge's "Jane Doe" for instance, in fact benefit from being severely smashed and clipping because it only heightens the artistic intent of the artist. The whole loudness wars thing has just been blown out of proportion by people with little understanding of audio and people that just believe what they are told. Listen with your ears rather than looking at waveforms. I can name PLENTY of modern records with heaps of dynamics (the last two Katatonia albums, all Paramore's albums on the songs that were written specifically with a lot of volume dynamics). There are also some records that went too far ("Planetary Duality" by The Faceless which pumps severely, or Hypocrisy's "Virus" album which is so severely smashed I can't get through more than about 2 songs without turning it out). That being said, I find limiting, compression and clipping all hugely useful tools for when I'm mixing, because it can help open up headroom, cut down piercing transients, keep low frequencies under control and make a mix easier to work with in general.
Another myth is that it's always the record companies want the loudness. Wrong. It's usually the clients that ask for it to be smashed. Sometimes mastering engineers receive mixes that are smashed before mastering even occurs (Death Magnetic is a prime example, with well known mastering engineer Ted Jensen himself being embarrassed to have been involved with the album)
Anyway, most of the sound we hear lies in the actual tracking process, editing and mixing anyway. The best job a mastering engineer can do is to keep things as transparent as possible (this assumes they have received a well tracked and mixed recording)
Also, eh, I don't find Steven Wilson's productions to be THAT amazing anyway. They sound good, undeniably, but no one in their right mind could really say they line up to a mix from Chris Lord-Alge, Randy Staub, Daniel Bergstrand, Jens Bogren , Andy Wallace or James Paul Wisner. There's only so much you can do with cheap Apogee converters and AFAIK little to no outboard gear and the fact unlike the aforementioned, he is also a musician and composer who doesn't quite have the time to learn as much about mixing as dedicated mix engineers.
|
Looks like someone needs to listen to some original mixes of albums. Lets take a generic choice of DSOTM, the dynamics and fullness of the original are destroyed by the remastering process. I highly doubt anyone is going through all the trouble of finding original mixes just to be "cool and trendy".
Some records, like Converge's "Jane Doe" for instance, in fact benefit from being severely smashed and clipping because it only heightens the artistic intent of the artist.
I'd like to hear that explained, because I fail to see how clipping could ever benefit anything.
|
Posted By: Petrovsk Mizinski
Date Posted: January 29 2010 at 01:09
clarke2001 wrote:
But it's not physical!
Simply by pasting samples of preserved wave on the top of clipped ones you will get the result. Of course, it would be necessary to do all the possible permutations to get an acceptable result. If an average song contains 500000 amplitudes, the combination are a factorial of 500000, a fast processor should do it in less than several trillion year...okay, nevermind. Back to my cup of coffee.
I came up with a good idea, and it turned out the universe is too small for it. Damn.
|
So, have you given up or not?
himtroy wrote:
Looks like someone needs to listen to some original mixes of albums. Lets take a generic choice of DSOTM, the dynamics and fullness of the original are destroyed by the remastering process. I highly doubt anyone is going through all the trouble of finding original mixes just to be "cool and trendy".
Some records, like Converge's "Jane Doe" for instance, in fact benefit from being severely smashed and clipping because it only heightens the artistic intent of the artist.
I'd like to hear that explained, because I fail to see how clipping could ever benefit anything. |
I am familiar with both the unmastered and mastered versions (my dad was an avid PF fan and owned many of the original vinyls), please do not insult me by making assumptions, I do know what I've listened to and haven't listened to. I am EXTREMELY familiar with Pink Floyd's music, as they are easily my favorite prog band of the "classic" era. I decided to listen to the remastered version of "Wish You Were Here". The amount of dynamic range present in this remaster is absolutely huge. The RMS values go from about -100dB to about the loudest average of about -20dB. Is is a RIDICULOUS amount of dynamic range. Some modern records, such as the example of The Faceless album, would be lucky to vary more than few dB throughout a single track (which doesn't really matter all that much anyway, since it's technical death metal and is not meant to be inherently dynamic music). The wave form of the remastered Wish You Were Here also shows it has HEAPS of dynamics This is before I go onto the point where I get out of my DAW software, close my eyes and just listen with my ears. The results? I can hear bucketloads of dynamics, as I expected. The dynamics have not been destroyed. Yes, it's louder, but it's plenty dynamic. Sure, not as dynamic as it once was, but given it utilizes a VERY large chunk of the range of a 16 bit depth Red Book format CD's (which admittedly, is a format I'm not in love with and I hope they replace it with a 32 bit depth digital format one day) dynamic potential, it's hugely dynamic for what it is. Just because it has lost a tiny bit of dynamic does not mean it has been "destroyed". It has not been smashed and brickwalled to death like "Death Magnetic" or Hypocrisy's "Virus" album. The remastering process was done rather tastefully and indeed a good mastering engineer can make it sound fuller than the original.
As for Converge, come back to me after a few months of listening to their albums, understanding what the band is aiming for and getting to know Kurt Ballou's production and you will understand why many of their records are absolutely smashed. The production is intentionally very dirty and with that in mind I find the clipping to be quite musical in the context of the artistic intent
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Converge_%28band%29 - http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Converge_%28band%29 However I do not expect everyone is going to enjoy hardcore punk/metalcore
|
Posted By: Mr ProgFreak
Date Posted: January 29 2010 at 01:25
^ I just checked the album gain of the WYWH remaster: -3,75dB. That's a lot of headroom - about 6-7dB more than the really loud recordings.
And of course I could have told that without resorting to measuring the album gain ... just listening to the recording shows that it's very well done.
------------- https://tagyourmusic.org/users/Mike" rel="nofollow - https://tagyourmusic.org/users/Mike
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Posted By: Slartibartfast
Date Posted: January 29 2010 at 05:40
clarke2001 wrote:
|
Speaking as someone who played with a couple of different synthesizers, I can tell you that sine waves are more interesting when they are clipped. And I am actually being partially serious.
------------- Released date are often when it it impacted you but recorded dates are when it really happened...
|
Posted By: clarke2001
Date Posted: January 29 2010 at 08:18
Slartibartfast wrote:
clarke2001 wrote:
|
Speaking as someone who played with a couple of different synthesizers, I can tell you that sine waves are more interesting when they are clipped. And I am actually being partially serious.
|
I'm an analog synth freak myself, and I absolutely agree. Actually, that picture above is giving quite a sweet distortion. Alesis Ion/Micron synths (not real analogs but nevermind) are capable of modulating sine wave in interesting ways (without going deep into FM synthesis). I'm curios if there's any synth with an oscillator capable of changing sine wave's width - in a same way square wave turns into pulse wave.
------------- https://japanskipremijeri.bandcamp.com/album/perkusije-gospodine" rel="nofollow - Percussion, sir!
|
Posted By: acdc7369
Date Posted: January 30 2010 at 01:00
Mr ProgFreak wrote:
I think that you have a point, but especially when it comes to Prog remasters you shouldn't dismiss all remasters as being bad, let alone "most" modern productions. Whenever I rip an album to mp3 I also calculate the "replay gain" in Winamp, and it's a reasonably good indicator of how loud the album is. I've analyzed more than 100 albums of 2009 this way, and I've found a variety of degrees of loudness. Specifically I've just checked the list: It's 133 albums, the loudest is Slayer's World Painted Blood (album replay gain -12,30dB), the least loud is Epignosis' Still the Waters (album replay gain -0,64dB), and the median is about -8dB (half of the albums are louder, the other half is less loud). -8dB is not very loud and doesn't suggest clipping (it's possible, but unlikely to be caused by artificial increase of loudness at this level of album replay gain).
|
Yeah, of course there are exceptions to the rule. King Crimson's remasters don't sound too bad and I actually prefer them to the vinyl (especially in the court of the crimson king...WAY too trebley!) But other bands like Rush I think sound way better on vinyl after listening to their remasters all these years. It depends on the mastering engineer...some of them don't compress it as much but others annihilate the track.
Certif1ed wrote:
This is the "loudness war" - and Mike is correct, it doesn't apply to all modern masters or remasters. Certainly, in order to make the product compete with other products, a certain level of loudness must be achieved. But don't forget that analog mastering used compression out of necessity because of the limitations of vinyl, and, since mastering is a process that takes many years, if not decades to perfect (I know - I've tried many, many times!), the average home recordist cannot expect to create a good master from a vinyl rip. All you can hope for is a faithful digital reproduction, which will probably be a touch compressed, since out of necessity, you need to keep the levels down to keep the "spikes" - or compress it yourself. Ouch. Clipping is obvious in a waveform opened in something like WavePad - you can see clearly the "shaved whiskers" as I like to call them, as the top of the wave form follows a bizzarre straight edge. This is most clearly seen with Metallica's "Death Magnetic". Compare with my favourite CD remaster, Marillion's "Script for a Jester's Tear". Lots of mountain peaks and deep valleys, with "whiskers" a-plenty. Not all digital recordings are victims of over compression and heavy handedness with the gain - studio engineers are aware of the issues, and I would think that most would prefer to create a nice product than subvert their art and create something as horrible sounding as "Death Magnetic"... Of course, money talks. My money goes to vinyl 98 times out of 100. Smile
|
But why is it that vinyls sound way more dynamic than their CD counterparts a lot of the time? Compression would eliminate dynamics, and I prefer vinyls because they generally tend to be more dyanmic.
Fortunately, analog compression doesn't cause any kind of clipping or distortion that it is caused in the discrete domain.
|
Posted By: acdc7369
Date Posted: January 30 2010 at 01:57
halabalushindigus wrote:
Umm, no offense but he doesn't really. He's rehashing that same "OMG MASTERING BAD" argument that people do after they read a few articles on the internet about how limiting is killing everything and everyone. It's not true and it's a situation that's been blown out of proportion by everyone and their dog that feels the need to hop on the bandwagon of bashing modern day mastering to be "cool and trendy" and to feel better about themselves. Proper, well done mastering with heavy limiting and compression actually helps to bring forward lots of little nuances and details in the sound that would otherwise be lost on the listener, so to say remastering is an atrocity is just absurd quite frankly,
It also remains a fact that many modern records, remastered, or just simply stuff that was produced recently and released recently as new music, still retain a lot of dynamic range. It's a myth that today's music in general lacks dynamic, because it's not all like that. And some music (some death metal for example) is inherently undynamic anyway in its volume levels, and being mastered loud serves to fit the aesthetic. Some records, like Converge's "Jane Doe" for instance, in fact benefit from being severely smashed and clipping because it only heightens the artistic intent of the artist. The whole loudness wars thing has just been blown out of proportion by people with little understanding of audio and people that just believe what they are told. Listen with your ears rather than looking at waveforms. I can name PLENTY of modern records with heaps of dynamics (the last two Katatonia albums, all Paramore's albums on the songs that were written specifically with a lot of volume dynamics). There are also some records that went too far ("Planetary Duality" by The Faceless which pumps severely, or Hypocrisy's "Virus" album which is so severely smashed I can't get through more than about 2 songs without turning it out). That being said, I find limiting, compression and clipping all hugely useful tools for when I'm mixing, because it can help open up headroom, cut down piercing transients, keep low frequencies under control and make a mix easier to work with in general.
Another myth is that it's always the record companies want the loudness. Wrong. It's usually the clients that ask for it to be smashed. Sometimes mastering engineers receive mixes that are smashed before mastering even occurs (Death Magnetic is a prime example, with well known mastering engineer Ted Jensen himself being embarrassed to have been involved with the album)
Anyway, most of the sound we hear lies in the actual tracking process, editing and mixing anyway. The best job a mastering engineer can do is to keep things as transparent as possible (this assumes they have received a well tracked and mixed recording)
Also, eh, I don't find Steven Wilson's productions to be THAT amazing anyway. They sound good, undeniably, but no one in their right mind could really say they line up to a mix from Chris Lord-Alge, Randy Staub, Daniel Bergstrand, Jens Bogren , Andy Wallace or James Paul Wisner. There's only so much you can do with cheap Apogee converters and AFAIK little to no outboard gear and the fact unlike the aforementioned, he is also a musician and composer who doesn't quite have the time to learn as much about mixing as dedicated mix engineers.
| I don't even know where to start destroying you. I'm not "rehashing" any argument, and I'm not just "believing something I'm told". In fact, I've never heard anybody anywhere write an article stating anything I said. It's an opinion I've formed based on the facts that I presented. You're extremely ignorant and insulting for even assuming that I'm jumping on some sort of fictional "bandwagon" that doesn't even exist. If anything, YOU'RE on the bandwagon for preferring the undereducated norm. Have you ever taken any digital signal processing courses? Do you even know anything about how digital audio reproduction even works?
Compressors have their purpose and they were originally used correctly. The voice, for example, has a much larger dynamic range than most instruments in a conventional band, and therefore a compressor would be appropriate. However, an electric guitar needs very minimal compression, if any at all, because the tubes essentially act as compressors on their own when they saturate. But there is absolutely no need to compress the master track in the way that's being done today. It brings out absolutely nothing because the individual instruments' dynamics have already been altered to their proper ratios on the master track. Further compressing the track accomplishes absolutely nothing - it brings out NO more detail whatsoever. All it does is make everything "loud" when that could have been accomplished with a volume knob and creating the same effect, except the dynamics of the master track would have been preserved.
I find your statement that many modern recordings retain dynamic range is false. Sure, there are a few exceptions to every rule but I highly disagree with your claim of "many". Everything I hear just sounds like its constantly one volume, all the time. And the waveforms tell no lies. But even when I do take your advice and "listen to my ears instead of the waveforms", that doesn't help at all - it's clearly not working for you. If you can't hear the absence of dynamics in modern recordings and remasters, and if you can't hear the LOUD static that gets created when the master track is clipped, then you're deaf.
Since I found it hard to believe that death metal and emo bands that you listed would ever have any dynamics, I decided to humor myself and check out Paramore's "Ignorance". Sounded very static-y and had absolutely no dynamics. Then I peaked at the waveform and what a shock. Loaded down with massive compression and clipping. The song almost looks like a bar of noise that's just clipping and distorting the entire time...so I have absolutely no idea what you're talking about. You can't have dynamic range (variation in amplitude) when there is NO variation in amplitude on the waveform itself!
I also disagree with your assertion that death metal is underdyanmic. That's one of the most ridiculous statements I've ever heard. I think an over-compressed death metal record is NOT impressive sounding because it has no dynamics. Death metal is LOADED with dynamics, and compression makes it sound weak. The drums have no bite to them!
Of course, my thoughts on over-compression are an opinion. However, my statements on clipping are fact. There is no advantage to intentionally clipping a source. It destroys the integrity of the digital medium and only loads your signal down with distortion. Why on earth do you need a source to be clipped? Is it to compensate for the incompetence of your stereo system? It's called a volume knob. Turn it up if it's not loud enough for you. But why would you ever want to listen to a piece of music that is completely distorted on purpose? It's like playing your CD through a solid state guitar amp with the distortion channel on. There is literally no difference! You might as well have the record company scratch the sh*t out of the CD and sell it that way because the distortion induced by the CD player's digital error correction sounds cool.
It IS the record companies that demand it. Have you heard any of the Alan Parsons Project remasters? Alan Parsons is a much better engineer than all of the people you listed, and he doesn't think very highly of the loudness war. Yet his remasters were smashed to sh*t. Why? I highly doubt he had the last word! You see, loudness has always been a ploy that record companies have used to get people to buy their records. It's been done since the days of 45s. Albums were pressed loudly to attract the attention of customers. Today, that same logic applies. Except they can't just compress everything and make it ridiculously loud...they have to clip it too. The consumer LIKES it loud! Sure, some artists may call for it...but most of them probably don't even understand what's happening to their music. I can assure you they would be outraged if they actually understood completely what was going on. Recording and Mastering engineers get the guns to their head. Why do you think Ted Jensen mastered Metallica that way? Because he likes having food on his table!
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Posted By: halabalushindigus
Date Posted: January 30 2010 at 02:34
Like I said, he knows what he is talking about. I bought a cd recently that I've never seen before sold on a cd format "McGear" 1974 by Paul McCartney's brother with Wings. I'ts frekin loaded with static even at LOW volumes, the piano just oozes with static. Screw that. Im gonna play my sratchy record
-------------
assume the power 1586/14.3
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Posted By: Mr ProgFreak
Date Posted: January 30 2010 at 02:54
acdc7369 wrote:
But why is it that vinyls sound way more dynamic than their CD counterparts a lot of the time? Compression would eliminate dynamics, and I prefer vinyls because they generally tend to be more dynamic.
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I don't think this is true - at least not from my experience. I guess it mostly depends on which vinyls and CDs you listen to - and which combinations you choose to compare. Maybe for someone who mostly listens to 70s vinyls and their remastered versions on CD it might appear like CDs are often worse than vinyls. I have a totally different perspective, since I am usually listening to modern recordings on CD. Many classic albums too of course, but I grew up with modern mastering techniques (90s and onward), so maybe I am simply more used to it. Not the overly compressed sound (I don't like that), but the kind of production that is done originally for digital formats.
[QUTE=acdc7369] Fortunately, analog compression doesn't cause any kind of clipping or distortion that it is caused in the discrete domain. [/QUOTE]
Every kind of compression adds distortion ... but there are different kinds of distortion. It can be harmonic and actually improve the perceived quality of the recording. But even then, it can't be called audiophile since it changes the original recording. Personally I would prefer an audiophile recording/mastering, preserving the original sound as well as possible ... and if I like a touch of analog/harmonic distortion I can always use a good tube amp to listen to it.
------------- https://tagyourmusic.org/users/Mike" rel="nofollow - https://tagyourmusic.org/users/Mike
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Posted By: Petrovsk Mizinski
Date Posted: January 30 2010 at 03:53
I now remember why I don't really come to this forum much anymore,
geezus.
You come to a forum just to post in this thread, sprouting lots of audio
myths that have been debunked years ago by scientific evidence.
I have made many positive contributions to this site. Where are your band biographies that you contributed to the site, huh? Where are your other posts that gave good advice to other forum members? I don't see any. Don't just come in here and stomp all over the place on your high horse as an internet tough guy, because it's ridiculous and proves your lack of credibility. Sometimes I wonder why I ever be a nice guy and a helpful person in the first place, because people like you just come to sh*t all over the place Go learn some humility and then come back, For now, I'm done with this thread.
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Posted By: Mr ProgFreak
Date Posted: January 30 2010 at 04:10
^ not sure who you mean ... but nowhere is the old saying "no good deed goes unpunished" more true than in the internet. You can take pleasure from the fact that there might be many silent readers who approve of your posts though and find them helpful.
------------- https://tagyourmusic.org/users/Mike" rel="nofollow - https://tagyourmusic.org/users/Mike
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Posted By: acdc7369
Date Posted: January 30 2010 at 10:01
Petrovsk Mizinski wrote:
I now remember why I don't really come to this forum much anymore,
geezus.
You come to a forum just to post in this thread, sprouting lots of audio
myths that have been debunked years ago by scientific evidence.
I have made many positive contributions to this site. Where are your band biographies that you contributed to the site, huh? Where are your other posts that gave good advice to other forum members? I don't see any. Don't just come in here and stomp all over the place on your high horse as an internet tough guy, because it's ridiculous and proves your lack of credibility. Sometimes I wonder why I ever be a nice guy and a helpful person in the first place, because people like you just come to sh*t all over the place Go learn some humility and then come back, For now, I'm done with this thread.
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Audio myths? Debunked? Science? I don't think so. You've given me no evidence or science whatsoever that contradicts anything I've said. You can't just say that what I said is unscientific becuase you disagree with it - it is completely scientific and any electrical engineering professor would laugh in your face if you repeated your argument to them. However, I have given you science: clipped waveforms are distorted. Period. And what difference does it make how much I've contributed to the site? I've been a member almost as long as you have and I've been coming to progarchives long before I even decided to register. How much I've contributed to band biographies or other forum members is totally irrelevant to the discussion at hand. Yet somehow somehow that gives me a lack of credibility?
You weren't being a nice guy at all. You completely started off your response to me by saying that I have no idea what I'm talking about and that I'm jumping on a bandwagon, and that i know nothing about audio. I think you're the one who needs to learn how to be humane and have a debate instead of attacking people that you don't perceive as correct with your junk science.
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Posted By: acdc7369
Date Posted: January 30 2010 at 10:14
Mr ProgFreak wrote:
acdc7369 wrote:
But why is it that vinyls sound way more dynamic than their CD counterparts a lot of the time? Compression would eliminate dynamics, and I prefer vinyls because they generally tend to be more dynamic.
|
I don't think this is true - at least not from my experience. I guess it mostly depends on which vinyls and CDs you listen to - and which combinations you choose to compare. Maybe for someone who mostly listens to 70s vinyls and their remastered versions on CD it might appear like CDs are often worse than vinyls. I have a totally different perspective, since I am usually listening to modern recordings on CD. Many classic albums too of course, but I grew up with modern mastering techniques (90s and onward), so maybe I am simply more used to it. Not the overly compressed sound (I don't like that), but the kind of production that is done originally for digital formats. |
Yeah, like I said before it literally is case by case. There are some CDs that sound better than the vinyls...then there are some CDs that literally sound identical to the vinyls, and there are (IMO) mostly vinyls that sound better than the CDs. As far as modern recordings go, I grew up listening to Rage Against the Machine on CD and recently discovered their first two albums on vinyl. Wow! The difference is night and day....no clipping and compression on the master tracks. And those two albums were well engineered to begin with! Their vinyls are definitely more dynamic.
Mr ProgFreak wrote:
acdc7369 wrote:
Fortunately, analog compression doesn't cause any kind of clipping or distortion that it is caused in the discrete domain.
|
Every kind of compression adds distortion ... but there are different kinds of distortion. It can be harmonic and actually improve the perceived quality of the recording. But even then, it can't be called audiophile since it changes the original recording. Personally I would prefer an audiophile recording/mastering, preserving the original sound as well as possible ... and if I like a touch of analog/harmonic distortion I can always use a good tube amp to listen to it.
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Well, it depends on what you would define as analog distortion. I was actually referring to analog "clipping" which, technically is THEORETICALLY impossible if you have a power supply large enough to handle the power of the waveform you're trying to reproduce, circuit components with higher tolerances than the power of the signal, etc. But I don't use tube amps when listening to music because of the harmonic distortion the vacuum tubes add to the signal when they saturate (in this case where, as you were stating, clipping/distortion/compression are the same thing). I guess I should have been more specific .
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Posted By: DJPuffyLemon
Date Posted: January 30 2010 at 21:06
Not to add MORE fuel to the fire, but this page: http://www.tomshardware.com/forum/49916-6-simple-newbie-vinyl-question - http://www.tomshardware.com/forum/49916-6-simple-newbie-vinyl-question has a shìt load of info which contradicts a lot of what's been said by the majority of the vinyl lovers in this thread...such as:
To explain: Vinyl has limited dynamic range and a whole host of
distortions besides, but some of those distortions give it a wonderful,
resonant sound. Some audiophiles mistake this resonance for "accuracy,"
which is a technical term referring to the relationship between the
recording and the output. But many people who love vinyl don't want to
admit that what they love about it is, technically speaking,
distortion. So they invent all sorts of pseudoscientific theories about
how vinyl must somehow be technically superior to CD. I'm surprised you
found someone making the argument that vinyl offers higher dynamic
range, because that is so obviously wrong, but it gives you some idea
of the lengths to which some vinylphiles will go to avoid facing up to
the fact that what appeals to them about vinyl is a technical weakness
of the medium. |
Well, CDs are capable of reproducing the audible frequency range -- 20 Hz
to 20,000 Hz, more or less -- with the same excellnet fidelity from lowest
to highest. LPs simply can't do that. |
> I've heard of this endless debate and am not trying to start another one. I
> just finished reading lots of info and graphs on why analog is better than
> digital since it has 'higher resolution', etc.
>
|
Perhaps you still have not read enough?
Vinyl simply has less resolution, because of noise and distortion.
Resolution is determined by the loudest and softest that the medium can
reproduce. Vinyl has at best 70 dB or so of dynamic range (i.e. the
difference between the loudest signal it can reproduce without
significant distortion and the noise floor), and that is equivalent to
only 12 bits or 13 bits of resolution. Most vinyl LP's have even less
resolution because of excessive surface noise. |
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Posted By: Certif1ed
Date Posted: January 31 2010 at 12:09
^ I think that aspect of the science has been beaten to death - CDA can be more accurate than vinyl - this is undisputable.
The reality is that mixes can lose accuracy, if they're "badly" remastered - remember that not every music-buying person cares about accuracy, and prefers dynamics so they don't have to turn up the quiet bits and turn down the loud bits.
Then there's the "loudness war", which has been a strong side-topic these last 3 pages, and the FACT that over-compression reduces dynamic range, so no matter how accurate the potential of the medium, many modern CDs lose huge amounts of music (ie, the dynamic, and who knows what else under the distortion caused by over-enthusiasm with the gain which leads to excessive digital clipping) in order to be "1 louder".
Clipping = lost data. Fact.
The bottom line is that your ears will tell you which is actually best.
All science can do is prove related facts, not that one is better than the other. This is an important distinction.
------------- The important thing is not to stop questioning.
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Posted By: Vibrationbaby
Date Posted: January 31 2010 at 13:04
I thought all the anger and rage was supposed to be reserved for the anti-religion threads.
-------------
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Posted By: mystic fred
Date Posted: January 31 2010 at 14:19
Vibrationbaby wrote:
I thought all the anger and rage was supposed to be reserved for the anti-religion threads. |
vinyl is not a format, it is a religion
hail to the great black plastic God!
and fall all usurpers, infidels and false idols!
------------- Prog Archives Tour Van
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Posted By: Vibrationbaby
Date Posted: January 31 2010 at 15:47
OLA SALEEMA PRAISE THE PLASIC GOD!!!! I AM NOT WORTHY!!! I AM NOT WORTHY!!!
-------------
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Posted By: acdc7369
Date Posted: January 31 2010 at 16:49
Posted By: acdc7369
Date Posted: January 31 2010 at 16:52
Posted By: acdc7369
Date Posted: January 31 2010 at 16:52
acdc7369 wrote:
acdc7369 wrote:
DJPuffyLemon wrote:
Not to add MORE fuel to the fire, but this page: http://www.tomshardware.com/forum/49916-6-simple-newbie-vinyl-question - http://www.tomshardware.com/forum/49916-6-simple-newbie-vinyl-question has a shìt load of info which contradicts a lot of what's been said by the majority of the vinyl lovers in this thread...such as:
To explain: Vinyl has limited dynamic range and a whole host of
distortions besides, but some of those distortions give it a wonderful,
resonant sound. Some audiophiles mistake this resonance for "accuracy,"
which is a technical term referring to the relationship between the
recording and the output. But many people who love vinyl don't want to
admit that what they love about it is, technically speaking,
distortion. So they invent all sorts of pseudoscientific theories about
how vinyl must somehow be technically superior to CD. I'm surprised you
found someone making the argument that vinyl offers higher dynamic
range, because that is so obviously wrong, but it gives you some idea
of the lengths to which some vinylphiles will go to avoid facing up to
the fact that what appeals to them about vinyl is a technical weakness
of the medium. |
Well, CDs are capable of reproducing the audible frequency range -- 20 Hz
to 20,000 Hz, more or less -- with the same excellnet fidelity from lowest
to highest. LPs simply can't do that. |
> I've heard of this endless debate and am not trying to start another one. I
> just finished reading lots of info and graphs on why analog is better than
> digital since it has 'higher resolution', etc.
>
|
Perhaps you still have not read enough?
Vinyl simply has less resolution, because of noise and distortion.
Resolution is determined by the loudest and softest that the medium can
reproduce. Vinyl has at best 70 dB or so of dynamic range (i.e. the
difference between the loudest signal it can reproduce without
significant distortion and the noise floor), and that is equivalent to
only 12 bits or 13 bits of resolution. Most vinyl LP's have even less
resolution because of excessive surface noise. |
|
That's exactly the point I've been making the entire time: the digital format IS superior. I never once said that vinyl has more of a dynamic range than CDs...it's just that most CDs are poorly mastered and the music on them is less dynamic than on their vinyl counterparts. If CDs are mastered correctly, there is NO disadvantage whatsoever to them. Nothing in your post contradicts anything I've said or believe, because everything in your post is factual.
Like I said, the vinyl medium itself is not superior. But most recordings do sound better on vinyl, IMO. I believe digital vinyl rips offer the best of both worlds.
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Posted By: King Lizard
Date Posted: February 12 2010 at 21:17
Wow, this thread has opened a can of worms. Perhaps Bob Ludwig can shed some light.
http://www.musictap.net/Interviews/LudwigBobInterview.html
Just for the record I won't be selling my vinyl.
------------- Farwell the temple master's bells
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Posted By: Matthew T
Date Posted: February 24 2010 at 13:35
I saw a Aust. Television show last night called The New Inventors and the bloke has invented a new way to clean vinyl. I was very impressed and to be honest I have never seen them come up this good. It is simillar to a womans face mask in Application and you should see how the records come up. Like new after the stuff has set and you peel it off. He calls it the Record Re-Virginiser. If you are keen here is the pod cast link Gotta hear That Nat King Cole and George Shearing album,that is the inventors fav album
http://www.abc.net.au/iview/?WT.mc_id=CORP_srch_iview&gclid=CJOYv5Pai6ACFYQtpAodi1XWeQ#/panel - http://www.abc.net.au/iview/?WT.mc_id=CORP_srch_iview&gclid=CJOYv5Pai6ACFYQtpAodi1XWeQ#/panel
------------- Matt
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Posted By: DJPuffyLemon
Date Posted: February 25 2010 at 20:52
Can anyone explain how vinyl pricing works? I don't mean like mint/near-mint/vg/etc, that's all listed online like here: http://yee.ch/Vinyl/vin_grading.htm. I mean like, I just saw what was rated as a VG+ edition of Yes' Relayer for only $5, which I think is a good deal considering it looks like the original release. How could someone part with an album like that for $5?
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Posted By: jammun
Date Posted: February 25 2010 at 21:41
Us old guys think vinyl sounds better because our hearing is shot and we can't hear anything on the high-end anyway, having attended too many Who concerts
------------- Can you tell me where we're headin'?
Lincoln County Road or Armageddon.
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Posted By: Certif1ed
Date Posted: February 26 2010 at 01:07
DJPuffyLemon wrote:
Can anyone explain how vinyl pricing works? I don't mean like mint/near-mint/vg/etc, that's all listed online like here: http://yee.ch/Vinyl/vin_grading.htm. I mean like, I just saw what was rated as a VG+ edition of Yes' Relayer for only $5, which I think is a good deal considering it looks like the original release. How could someone part with an album like that for $5?
|
There's no easy answer to that one - and one man's "Very Good" is another's "Scratched".
That said, I've bought "VG+" albums which have turned out to be "NM".
Albums like Relayer exist in vast quantities - many collectors end up with multiple copies, in their pursuit for the nearest-to-perfect one.
Also, the only way you can be sure it's the "original pressing" is to examine the little stamp marks in the vinyl - and understand the codes. Then you need to examine the sleeve - quite often people seem to swap a battered original sleeve for a tidier looking later one.
Depends on how fastidious you are as a collector, and what you want from the piece you're buying.
You should be able to get *a* copy of Relayer for very little money, given how many there are.
The most a Near Mint UK First press tends to go for is around £40-50, and the Japanese presses don't go any higher.
If you want a first UK press, look out for the textured sleeve, A1/B1 matrix endings on the codes, and the names "Porky" and "Pecko" in the dead wax in the center of the album.
Also, to verify that it's hardly been played (and hasn't been professionally cleaned so it only looks like it!), check the area around the spindle hole for little "spider" marks, caused by misaligning the album when putting it on the deck.
The more there are, the more the album's been played - this area marks really easily, so it's doubtful that there won't be any. If there aren't, and there is also surplus vinyl inside the hole, then congratulations! You really have found a true "Near Mint" copy, which will play really well.
------------- The important thing is not to stop questioning.
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Posted By: Henry Plainview
Date Posted: February 26 2010 at 01:18
Slartibartfast wrote:
On a side note, glass is also sort of a very slow moving liquid. Panes in a window will get thicker on the bottom and thinner at the top as time goes by. |
That's not true at all, the glass is thicker on the bottom of Medieval windows only because they weren't very good at casting glass yet.
Vibrationbaby wrote:
Searching for that elusive album by that obscure group in record shops, flea markets, junk sales ( although this is a thing of the past with the age of the internet ) There is a mystique about vinyl. Vinyl albums are more personal I find.
|
Poring through rows of albums sounds like a tremendous waste of time to me.
------------- if you own a sodastream i hate you
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Posted By: DJPuffyLemon
Date Posted: February 26 2010 at 01:43
Certif1ed wrote:
DJPuffyLemon wrote:
Can anyone explain how vinyl pricing works? I don't mean like mint/near-mint/vg/etc, that's all listed online like here: http://yee.ch/Vinyl/vin_grading.htm. I mean like, I just saw what was rated as a VG+ edition of Yes' Relayer for only $5, which I think is a good deal considering it looks like the original release. How could someone part with an album like that for $5?
|
There's no easy answer to that one - and one man's "Very Good" is another's "Scratched".
That said, I've bought "VG+" albums which have turned out to be "NM".
Albums like Relayer exist in vast quantities - many collectors end up with multiple copies, in their pursuit for the nearest-to-perfect one.
Also, the only way you can be sure it's the "original pressing" is to examine the little stamp marks in the vinyl - and understand the codes. Then you need to examine the sleeve - quite often people seem to swap a battered original sleeve for a tidier looking later one.
Depends on how fastidious you are as a collector, and what you want from the piece you're buying.
You should be able to get *a* copy of Relayer for very little money, given how many there are.
The most a Near Mint UK First press tends to go for is around £40-50, and the Japanese presses don't go any higher.
If you want a first UK press, look out for the textured sleeve, A1/B1 matrix endings on the codes, and the names "Porky" and "Pecko" in the dead wax in the center of the album.
Also, to verify that it's hardly been played (and hasn't been professionally cleaned so it only looks like it!), check the area around the spindle hole for little "spider" marks, caused by misaligning the album when putting it on the deck.
The more there are, the more the album's been played - this area marks really easily, so it's doubtful that there won't be any. If there aren't, and there is also surplus vinyl inside the hole, then congratulations! You really have found a true "Near Mint" copy, which will play really well. | Awesome thanks for the info. I'm not sure if this actually means it is the original release or not, but if it says Atlantic 1974 on the lp I'm guessing that mean when it was issued? But either way I'm not even a collector so not that important.
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Posted By: Rottenhat
Date Posted: March 06 2010 at 12:24
My vinyls was in the cellar when a terrible accident happened. A freak of nature flooded (the cellar). And every god forsaken vinyl I stored in the crllar smelled of old mold thereafter.. I took this a sign from God to get rid of those horrible pieces of plastic. And as time went by i somehow managed to fool the old drunken b*****ds at my local pub to take care of the problem. Now all my vinyls are in the caring hands of old long-haired stoners.
The end.
------------- Language is a virus from outer space.
-William S. Burroughs
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