Pavel Tchichikov
Pavel Tchichikov
originally posted by BJ:
Vinyl pathetic?
Schnabel and Richter keep on hitting wrong notes on vinyl.
originally posted by BJ:
Vinyl pathetic?
originally posted by BJ:
A 2nd hand Benchmark DAC could be cool
originally posted by Keith Levenberg:
(and thank god we haven't lost another one to the pathetic vinyl fad).
originally posted by BJ:
Ian,
I can't tell if you've already bought the amp - but in that price range, I would definitely recommend ...
GNR is indeed represented among the 25,000 FLACs in my library! But it doesn't matter if you're Slash or Itzhak Perlman, digital is still higher fidelity than rubbing a needle on a piece of plastic, and it goes without saying that nobody ever would have proffered the phonograph as an improvement if digital had been invented first.originally posted by Robert Dentice:
originally posted by Keith Levenberg:
(and thank god we haven't lost another one to the pathetic vinyl fad).
Ouch! Well I guess if your music tastes are still the same, I remember you being a Guns N' Roses fan, it does not matter : )
originally posted by Keith Levenberg:
originally posted by Robert Dentice:
originally posted by Keith Levenberg:
(and thank god we haven't lost another one to the pathetic vinyl fad).
Ouch! Well I guess if your music tastes are still the same, I remember you being a Guns N' Roses fan, it does not matter : )
GNR is indeed represented among the 25,000 FLACs in my library! But it doesn't matter if you're Slash or Itzhak Perlman, digital is still higher fidelity than rubbing a needle on a piece of plastic, and it goes without saying that nobody ever would have proffered the phonograph as an improvement if digital had been invented first.
originally posted by Keith Levenberg:
GNR is indeed represented among the 25,000 FLACs in my library! But it doesn't matter if you're Slash or Itzhak Perlman, digital is still higher fidelity than rubbing a needle on a piece of plastic, and it goes without saying that nobody ever would have proffered the phonograph as an improvement if digital had been invented first.originally posted by Robert Dentice:
originally posted by Keith Levenberg:
(and thank god we haven't lost another one to the pathetic vinyl fad).
Ouch! Well I guess if your music tastes are still the same, I remember you being a Guns N' Roses fan, it does not matter : )
This is just a psychological trick being played on your mind by the nostalgia associated with vinyl, perhaps the beauty of your gear, and the persistence of bad metaphors that misunderstand how digital audio works like Neil Young talking about a warm mist vs. a million little ice cubes. The soul is in the music. The analogy to the 100 point Napa cab is the wrong one. It's not two different wines, it's the same wine in two vessels. The only thing the media does is reproduce the music more or less faithfully. Digital does it more faithfully (or is at least capable of doing so - not all audio engineers are created equal), so the soul you think you're hearing on vinyl is just distortion. Lots of the LPs selling like hotcakes these days on account of the current fad actually come from digital masters.originally posted by Robert Dentice:
originally posted by Keith Levenberg:
originally posted by Robert Dentice:
originally posted by Keith Levenberg:
(and thank god we haven't lost another one to the pathetic vinyl fad).
Ouch! Well I guess if your music tastes are still the same, I remember you being a Guns N' Roses fan, it does not matter : )
GNR is indeed represented among the 25,000 FLACs in my library! But it doesn't matter if you're Slash or Itzhak Perlman, digital is still higher fidelity than rubbing a needle on a piece of plastic, and it goes without saying that nobody ever would have proffered the phonograph as an improvement if digital had been invented first.
I am not anti-digital, but I am very pro vinyl. It is a different experience. Digital can be like drinking a 100 point Napa cab...it has no flaws but also has no soul and is uninteresting to me in certain instances.
originally posted by Pavel Tchichikov:
originally posted by mark e:
I wonder if you have used Roon.
Yep. A sensible choice.
originally posted by Keith Levenberg:
This is just a psychological trick being played on your mind by the nostalgia associated with vinyl, perhaps the beauty of your gear, and the persistence of bad metaphors that misunderstand how digital audio works like Neil Young talking about a warm mist vs. a million little ice cubes. The soul is in the music. The analogy to the 100 point Napa cab is the wrong one. It's not two different wines, it's the same wine in two vessels. The only thing the media does is reproduce the music more or less faithfully. Digital does it more faithfully (or is at least capable of doing so - not all audio engineers are created equal), so the soul you think you're hearing on vinyl is just distortion. Lots of the LPs selling like hotcakes these days on account of the current fad actually come from digital masters.
I dunno, why do musicians get tattoos and wear sunglasses at night? just kidding. Instruments and recording gear are a different story obviously. Making a sound and recording a sound are very different exercises. And there's a whole lot of tech that goes into the recording before the point at which it migrates into an analogue or digital storage medium. It's very likely the vintage equipment is better but that has nothing to do with whether it ends up on an analogue or digital tape.originally posted by Robert Dentice:
originally posted by Keith Levenberg:
This is just a psychological trick being played on your mind by the nostalgia associated with vinyl, perhaps the beauty of your gear, and the persistence of bad metaphors that misunderstand how digital audio works like Neil Young talking about a warm mist vs. a million little ice cubes. The soul is in the music. The analogy to the 100 point Napa cab is the wrong one. It's not two different wines, it's the same wine in two vessels. The only thing the media does is reproduce the music more or less faithfully. Digital does it more faithfully (or is at least capable of doing so - not all audio engineers are created equal), so the soul you think you're hearing on vinyl is just distortion. Lots of the LPs selling like hotcakes these days on account of the current fad actually come from digital masters.
Then why do musicians spend so much money on vintage music instruments and recording gear? I know musicians who spend millions and I mean millions on vintage recording gear because they like the sound better.
And distortion can be beautiful!
Your analogy of not producing the sound faithfully reminds me of a winemaker who insisted he had to use commercial yeast because his job was to translate Terrior and if a wine had any flaws it would obliterate the Terrior and commercial yeasts ensured no flaws.
Again I am not anti-digital.
Also many rare records are not available in high quality digital format.
originally posted by Robert Dentice:
originally posted by Keith Levenberg:
(and thank god we haven't lost another one to the pathetic vinyl fad).
Ouch! Well I guess if your music tastes are still the same, I remember you being a Guns N' Roses fan, it does not matter : )