So if that TT played a "silent", zero volume signal, track and that was replayed at relatively high volume, and compared to the hirez recording chains capturing that signal and replaying it at the same level, there would be, or would have been, a very marked, even dramatic difference between the two ...??
Frank
the recording is of a Steinway piano......likely the most difficult thing for any reproduction chain to get right. there is nowhere to hide when trying to recreate (as best it can) the whole picture of a concert grande piano.
the hirez digital recording chains did a nice job of it; you can hear it on the K2HD CD. however; when we went back and forth (dozens or times over a 12 hour period) the digital was missing much of the nuance easily heard on the Lp. it did not get the overtones, the power of the low notes, the precision and focus, the vividness and sparkle of the high notes......like the Lp direct.
we never even considered any 'silent' sort of test. it was not on the agenda for the session.
allow me to relate a story which futher explains my point. about a year ago i had a local couple visit me. they were considering buying a Playback Designs MPS-5 digital player, had heard i had one, contacted me and i invited them for a listen. they were much into music and had a particular CD of a friend of theirs playing Liszt's Mephisto Waltz. they also had other piano CD's. so i played these for them and they loved how it sounded on the MPS-5 thru my system. they were nice, well done recordings. i asked them if they had any interest in hearing how piano sounded on vinyl. they said sure. so i played the Mephisto Waltz for them from the RR pressing 'Nojima Plays Listz'. they were completely blown away. we played their CD again. then the Lp again. i also played them the RR CD of Nojima Plays Listz for comparison.
their heads were pretty screwed up.
they decieded to forget the MPS-5 and bought a tt instead.
this is not rocket science. listen to what a very good tt can do with something like a piano compared to any PCM digital. you don't need to worry about how either format handles silence. the musical differences overwhelm your senses.
a less capable tt set-up can level the playing field somewhat; which is why i pick on Tim's nebulous vinyl references when he throws them out from time to time. why even bring up what some entry level Technics tt might have done many years ago? it would be like using a mid-80's CDP as your digital reference. they are not credible data points to hang one's hat on when commenting on how formats differ.