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#1 |
Senior Member
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This caught my eye today. CD's are really sooo horrible if you like sound
and it's proper reproduction. Why did most of us fall for the CD REVOLUTON in the 80's. I'm so ashamed for having moved up to CD's. That's why I posted a thread on which cartridge to buy. I ended up with the same old same old reliable cost friendly Stanton 681 EEE MK. it's on order from J&R . . .and now my new life resumes where it left off in 1987. 3000 lp's waiting to be rediscovered. ![]() ![]() ![]() Guttenberg's assessment is spot on- http://news.cnet.com/8301-13645_3-10...ml?tag=nl.e702 anyone feel the same way? Just take a gander at some of the idiotic comments at the articles end.... Last edited by franklinpross; 09-03-2009 at 08:35 PM. |
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#3 |
Blu-ray Samurai
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Back?! As far as I am concerned (and I realise that I am in the minority here), vinyl never went away!
The renewed interest in vinyl is one thing that inspired me to consider launching a vinyl-centric audio magazine. Work continues in the background while I jump through certain government mandated hoops in order to qualify for the program in which I hope to enroll. |
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#4 | |
Senior Member
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Please post a link for us to see . . . . .Subscription? 12 mos? pull some strings for God's sake . . . . .c'mon we need you . . . . . ![]() Last edited by franklinpross; 09-04-2009 at 11:19 PM. |
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#5 |
Blu-ray Ninja
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Threads like this can stir up the pot. While its true that a good handful of CDs are not well recorded, the ones that were well recorded can make you cry to your mama! Believe me I know how good CD can sound
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#7 | |
Senior Member
Mar 2008
New York
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The sound of Vinyl has made me appreciate artists so much more. For instance I always knew and liked some of Otis Reddings recordings, after I played one of his albums on vinyl he instantly became one favorite artist. It was like that was where he belonged. To be fare you need equal equipment to do the comparison. Comparing a turntable, cartridge, and phono stage set up around 5k to cd playback on the oppo for instance is not fare. After saying all that as Eddie Vedder so elequently screamed "SPIN THE BLACK CIRCLE" Joe Last edited by joe1515; 09-04-2009 at 12:52 PM. |
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#8 | |
Blu-ray Samurai
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The mag will be a freely-downloadable PDF, available from the mag's (currently non-existant) web site. When I get the OK to start the ball rolling officially, I'll put up a temporary web site which will allow interested people to sign up to a notification list. Stay tuned! |
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#9 |
Active Member
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#10 | |
Senior Member
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It's a turntables dream. Such an honest sound,,I can't begin to tell you. Really? $20 at Goodwill? You are on God's favorite list. Boy are you a lucky person. that's my TT. This is good news indeed. EVERYTHING OLD IS NEW AGAIN. ![]() |
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#11 | |
Active Member
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It needed some cosmetic TLC. It had obviously been stored in a damp environment, not too bad but there was a little corrosion and pitting. Also, the cover was scratched, but thankfully not cracked. A little elbow grease cleaned everything up. Of course, it suffers from the infamous arm lift failure. For $20, I'll live with it. It now sits next to my Technics SP-15 that I use for transcribing 78's. More on that in a second. Speaking on being on the list, I found a TEAC X1000-R reel to reel at a pawn shop. It would power up, go into FF and FR, but no play. I talked the owner down to $50, my "pig in a poke" price. I took it home, opened it up and did a little research. There was a blown transistor on the motor control board and the drive belt had melted, a common fate. TEAC still sells parts. It was $11 for the belt and $3.50 for the transistor. I'm thinking the failure must have been early, because there was hardly any head wear and cosmetically it was in pristine shape. Oh, there was a scratch on one of the knobs, but another call to TEAC and $6.00 later I had a replacement! So, for less than $75 invested, I have a beautiful and fully functioning TOTL reel to reel! My last story (sorry) goes back to 78's. I was in an antiques store in Arkansas that I had hesitated entering because they seemed overpriced. I found a table with a stack of 50-60 78's. I was disappointed because the first 5 or so was typical 40's records (Bing Crosby, etc.), all of which I already owned. The sixth record, though was an old pre-war blues record by Ida Cox on the Paramount label. Everything from there down was pre-war blues and jazz, all in great condition! While trying not to hyperventilate, I casually strolled up to the counter and asked the grizzled old man how much they wanted for 78's. He said: "Them black label records are 75 cents, but the blue labels and others are $1.00." I grabbed the entire stack and plunked down the $50 in cash. In the stack was a Black Swan, a very rare label. There was also Blind Lemon Jefferson's "Black Snake Moan". |
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#12 |
Blu-ray Ninja
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While I would love vinyl to be "back with a vengeance", since I have a few hundred vinyl albums that I would like to sell (I intend to keep 100), that is most certainly not the case and it's also not the case that vinyl generally sounds better than CD, although I will admit that this perception of quality is subjective.
Vinyl can sound better than CD if you're playing vinyl back on some esoteric system and the vinyl was mastered brilliantly and the CD was mastered poorly, but IMO, that's an unfair comparison. Of course a $5000 turntable and preamp might sound better than a $300 CD player and of course if someone blew the CD mastering or if the original tapes are no longer available (due to tape shredding, say) the CD will sound bad. But generally, any new vinyl that is produced is remastered from the CD source master anyway. The reality is that in 2008, vinyl album units were 6/10 of 1% of long-form unit sales. It's literally a rounding error. And if you count 10 digital single downloads as the equivalent of an album as the industry does, than the vinyl numbers are even lower. 2009 figures aren't available yet, but even if they double, it's still NOTHING. The reason why people think vinyl sounds better is because they remember the emotions they felt when they first listened to albums on vinyl. Every time I hear a CD that I think sucks and I think, "this sounded better on vinyl" and I go back to the vinyl, the vinyl sounds worse, many times remarkably worse. Those of us who are old enough to have been around for vinyl also listened to vinyl with better hearing. And that's what we remember. I copy vinyl to CD-R for a New York City radio personality and if I happen to have the same album on CD and if there's room on the CD-R, I'll also transfer some of the tracks from the CD. They always sound better and it's not only because they're frequently recorded hotter. They have far less distortion, if stereo, they have better separation, they have far lower noise and they have better dynamic range. In an A-B comparison, no one would pick the vinyl. As for Otis Redding, the Rhino CD boxed set mastered by Bill Inglot ("Otis: The Definitive Otis Redding") sounds really terrific, far better than any of the Otis Redding vinyl albums that I own. This set is out of print, so grab it now if you can still find a copy. Well before the advent of CD, audiophiles complained like hell about the poor quality of vinyl pressings in the U.S. That was one of the reasons collectors started seeking Japanese and European pressings of Beatles recordings, not just because of the different track configurations. So it really makes me laugh that so-called audiophiles are now seeking those very same bad pressings. Having said that, are most CDs recorded with too much level compression and loss of dynamic range? Absolutely. But most LPs didn't have a lot of dynamic range either. Now if we're talking about 45RPM singles, that's something else. 45RPM singles in the U.S. had a distinct sound to them because they were generally mastered incredibly hot, but that distinct sound is largely distortion. (When I was a kid, I always wondered why the records sounded so much better during the fade-out. It was because there was lower distortion at lower levels.) We happen to like that distortion because it's harmonic distortion that creates square waves, and we like the sound of odd-harmonic square waves (like a fuzz guitar) because we find it "pleasing". One of the reasons the Rolling Stones came to the U.S. to record at Chess Records was to try and get that sound. Engineers in the UK, especially at EMI, would never "pin the needle" or aim for tape saturation, but engineers in the US used tape saturation as a creative device. But even in the case of 45s, when mastered properly to CD, single mixes sound pretty good. Bill Inglot was also responsible for the first Motown boxed set and those sound very close to the original singles. Unless you have near-virgin copies of the original singles, they won't sound better. (For an example of a great sounding single that wasn't recorded too hot, listen to Dion's "Runaround Sue". It still sounds great today.) As for the way we listened to vinyl, I agree that we listened "closer" and that albums were designed to provide two "arcs" of music: side A and side B. That might not be true for the way CDs are produced today, but that has nothing to do with the technical quality. Don't confuse the quality of the music or production with the quality of the technology. Disclaimer: I have not yet listened to any of the new 180-gram vinyl that you now see in record stores for absurd prices. One of these days I will pick up one, but I don't expect to be impressed. Perhaps I'll be pleasantly surprised. |
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Blu-ray Samurai
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#14 | |
Senior Member
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GOD'S FAVORITE INDEED!!!!! nice score |
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#15 |
Senior Member
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Having said that, are most CDs recorded with too much level compression and loss of dynamic range? Absolutely. But most LPs didn't have a lot of dynamic range either.
by ZoetMB Nice, informative piece. There were a lot of Lp's that sounded awesome. One comes to mind I just listened to again. It was a GEM produced by The Hit Man, David Foster. Come to think of it his work as well as Phil Ramone's were quite outstanding. The LP was Peter Allen's BICOASTAL. The dynamic range and prescence and all of that were right on the money. Columbia Masterworks Original Casts recorded at 30 IPS were also unusually splendid. RCA RED LABEL Classical Lp's still are terrific. One comes to mind. The Gershwin set with the POPS. It beats the CD by a mile. And also...my hearing today is just a sharp as it was 45 years ago (thank God).The original copy I bought in 1959 of GYPSY in mono destroys the 24bit re-mastered one done by Sony a few years ago . ...Goddard was good. Last edited by franklinpross; 10-07-2009 at 08:50 PM. |
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#16 | |
Blu-ray Samurai
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Probably because records aren't portable and cassette tapes sounded like butt. Why be ashamed? As others have said, just because it's on vinyl doesn't mean it's gonna be greatness. A well recorded, mixed, and mastered album is gonna sound good regardless. Let's be honest, most people don't wanna buy a $500 TT, drop a ton on preamps/amps, good speakers, and then go out and spend $35 everytime a new album comes out that they want just for a "marginal" improvement in sound and that much desired analog "warmth." Most people listen to music in their cars, or while they're exercising, or waiting in line, so vinyl just doesn't appeal to most people. For the record, i'm not most people, and i love me some vinyl. |
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#18 |
Moderator
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I can't believe it has taken me a month to respond to a thread on vinyl! I must be losing it!
Although my vinyl rig sucks by comparison to many many others here, you'd be hard-pressed to find a bigger fan of the Black Gold. I have been purchasing vinyl since 1967 and my collection numbers well into the 4 digits, and is represented by just about every music genre you can find. Like Richteer posted earlier, I never left or abandoned the format and was able to find specialty stores selling used Lp's during the lean years, and even the odd new pressing. To me vinyl isn't just about the sound. Some are indeed downright terrible, but when it's done right....nothing else compares! Additionally, and this is what has always been of huge importance to me, vinyl is an interactive medium. I love the relationship between the listener, the actual vinyl, the TT, the cleaning, the care, etc. Another benefit, and maybe the most important one of all, is that vinyl forces you to listen to the music. You cannot just walk away, as Side A will be done by the time you get back as each side is only about 20-23 minutes long (sometimes a slight bit longer). Vinyl is an experience that cannot be matched by any other format! Have I made myself clear? ![]() ![]() John |
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#19 | |
Senior Member
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I think it's terrfic that you spelled out the experience so well. Might I add that as a kid in the 50's and 60's I took the interactive part more seriously than most. I had this little microscope that I rigged so I could periodically VIEW the stylus . . after the muck was cleaned off with a toothbrush dipped in diluted alocohol, I would view my little stylus in the light of an exposed bulb to gander at the clean stylus . . .then and only then could I continue listening . . . .ahhhhhhhh..life was so rich then . . . |
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#20 | |
Moderator
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And yes....life was indeed rich then! John |
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