That is very true. And when people have no reference in the form of unamplified live music, it becomes even more tricky. Then they may be aimlessly blowing in the wind of personal preferences and tastes, which may change all the time depending on what systems they get exposed to.
But even among people with unamplified live music as reference, the diverse approaches to high end are extremely personal.
Hello everyone,
Yes, I think that’s true.
When it comes to the delivery of digital content, we live in an age in which the formats have expanded beyond physical media to encompass file-based downloads and virtual streaming. And while it’s true that even during physical media’s heyday there were alternatives (DCC, DAT, Mini-Disc - suppress your guffaws if you must), they were all tied to dedicated hardware solutions, often with non-compatibility across formats.
As I see it, we have two somewhat intersecting issues that I think are being discussed here.
1) Musical content relative to format; and 2) interaction with that format; neither of which have anything to do with sound quality.
I love, and still buy physical media (both digital and analogue). However, a portion of the music I love and am continuing to discover is not being released physically. I can download it, or stream it. The likelihood of us including a server-based solution is therefore very high. However, some of the music I love will never ever make it to streaming services, nor be available as a higher-res download, in which case retaining the original physical copy seems prudent despite being limited to 44.1K (I have very little in the way of SACDs, mainly because only a small portion of the music I listen to is available on that format justifying the investment in a SACD player and I’ve never found a SACD player I truly loved).
The question for me apropos the OP is: Does that make a physical CD spinner redundant?
I don’t know that answer to that. I like interacting with CD covers and reading liner notes and appreciating the aesthetic of cover art and graphic design. I’m fully cognisant of the reality that CDs can be ripped, and the “convenience” that entails, but personally, I’ve never found it inconvenient to search for a CD or a piece of vinyl, and there’s part of me that actually enjoys browsing a physical library, much in the same way as I do interacting with real bookstores.
Eventually though, we will need to rationalise the purchase of a system in which digital media must be played. Let’s just put sound quality aside for the moment. While yes, virtual media will be streamed (if indeed streaming services are still a “thing” by then), and yes, downloaded files will be played back via a server, given the likelihood we will still have an extensive CD collection, until tested in the real-world I can’t say ahead of time that I might not still prefer to load a physical CD atop a mechanism and push a physical button to play it versus ripping that CD to a hard-drive and interacting with it via a piece of software.
But because it would be silly to ignore sound quality altogether, at some point I will need to ask myself whether the server would not be better utilised in the playback of both file-based/virtual content
as well as physical media ripped and stored to hard-drives and accessed via software on a remote tablet. And until I do a real world comparison with a dedicated CD transport versus the server of choice in my system in which the variables of power supply, grounding, connection and software settings are consistent and controlled, I can’t rule out the possibility we still might invest in a dedicated CD transport.
I would like to say that although I’ve experienced the EVO432 server that’s impressed me both times I’ve heard it in a full Aries Cerat system and that logically, it makes sense financially speaking to invest in just a server and DAC, I have no idea how much of an impact the server was having on the quality of the playback I experienced relative to the DAC. And although I heard none of the problems related to a server-based system I have with lesser alternatives, my suspicion is that no server makes up for weaknesses in a DAC, no matter how configurable that same server may be.
Which brings me to the conclusion that purchase of a dedicated CD spinner just to play CDs cannot yet be ruled out - not only because of a potential subjective increase in sound quality but also because it confers a degree of enjoyment apropos interaction not derived from a server/tablet.
For me, sound quality is one thing; enjoyment of interaction another. That they have a degree of overlap is partly why I think this thread exists, and why right now, I can’t state
a priori we would not spend the money on something many consider redundant. This of course, from an individual who has Nakamichi cassette decks saved to a watch list on eBay.
Best,
853guy