Bingo!The quality of the recording makes a bigger difference in my enjoyment of the music than the format.
John
Bingo!The quality of the recording makes a bigger difference in my enjoyment of the music than the format.
John
early in the day for popcorn.We're this deep into audio and still want videos of systems playing when we know videos aren't gonna be usable to learn fuck all about a system? Lol what?
We're this deep into audio and still want videos of systems playing when we know videos aren't gonna be usable to learn fuck all about a system? Lol what?
early in the day for popcorn.but might get interesting. maybe a cinnamon roll or two.....
@Al M. your self-praising words about your system warrant sonic evidence. Thinking a video does not represent your system is not a reason to avoid one -- let others assess its character on their own.
No one claims that a video and in-room listening are the same, but phone recordings tell more truth than not.
I say very little to convince people about my own system's sound and let my videos speak directly to others. Give it a try.
Digital strikes me as 'cleaner' than vinyl, but can feel a bit scrubbed, sometimes. (This is by no mans a universal finding.)
This likely involves mixing more than medium, where the mixes for vinyl might actually have been given more dynamic range than the digital mix
I like The Grateful Dead, and their new Plangent process releases, even on vinyl, sound kinda digital.
This may be blasphemy: I've sometimes wondered if turntable rumble might add something in the 20-50 Hz range that adds a feeling of heft to vinyl, as well. Ideally, this is all >70 dB down, so I might be way off!
Perhaps digital might offer faster rise time vs. vinyl, I do not know, but one of the differences between real drums, for instance, and a drum machine is an artificially fast rise time...could a slower rise time appeal to our ears more on vinyl than digital? Or, vice versa!
I like discussing differences, I hope I didn't seem to be promoting one over the other.
Vinyl
- can be very beautiful if not always entirely accurate or complete;
Digital
- distortions seem to be more intrusive and less natural;
- errors more of commission - something added;
- best is similar to vinyl but can have more structure and precision, bigger bass;
To me the technical issues with digital that need to be overcome are to do with digital noise and filtering. The aliasing noise is totally unnatural and most digital filtering is little better.
My own preference is for digital replay without digital filtering, but (like Audio Note) transformer filtering or (like my own) clever analog filtering.
A final thought: I watch 4K UHD blu rays on a 65" OLED tv and the contrast between restored classics and modern films is similar to vinyl vs digital. Take Hitchcock's "To Catch a Thief" vs Nolan's "Interstellar". TCAT has beautiful saturated colours, a slightly soft image with lots of grain, whilst Interstellar has a sharper more accurate picture, grain free and impressive. You could argue all day about which is better, I like both.
I find this very interesting. LP's are summed to mono at about 100 Hz, digital is not.Again, analog sourced vinyl records contain many times the resolution of lossy digital. This is especially heard in the bass.
Digital when lazy or hunting for new music , LP’s lastly as a treat , music as it should be alive and well with distractions …Mike, you only say which one sounds better in your opinion or that of your visitors.
The point of the thread, however, seems to be the question how the sound (characteristics) and the listening experience differ.
It is explicitly, per Peter's opening post, not the question which medium is deemed to sound better. We have had that latter discussion many, many times on WBF. No need for a repeat, thanks.
Right. My invitation extends further. Any WBF member in the Boston area, or visiting there sometime, who is interested in hearing my system, please feel free to PM me.
Videos won't do it, as you say.
Maybe someone can come up with a standard recording technique and recording device that can be used to take out as many variables as possible so that evaluating systems via video can be more comprehensive?
Differentiating digital v vinyl even in the context of one’s own system can be better understood as well, I would think.
Of course anyone that is going to post a video is likely going to want the best sounding recording upload/downloading to showcase their system but in the interest of comparing it might be good.
Someone in the know can provide standards by which anyone can participate…..maybe even start a thread which has videos only done accordingly.
while that is a common practice, especially for more modern electronic music and the playback gear it's mostly intended for, it's not close to being universal. not disputing that technically digital does not have some advantages in the lowest octaves. but musically analog makes a better bass performance case for the better recordings. more realism, tunefulness and weight. and it carries more ambient information in the lowest octaves which then completes the musical picture and better defines the venue. digital does ambience too, of course, but just not as completely.I find this very interesting. LP's are summed to mono at about 100 Hz, digital is not.
This might also account for differences!
while that is a common practice, especially for more modern electronic music and the playback gear it's mostly intended for, it's not close to being universal. not disputing that technically digital does not have some advantages in the lowest octaves. but musically analog makes a better bass performance case for the better recordings. more realism, tunefulness and weight. and it carries more ambient information in the lowest octaves which then completes the musical picture and better defines the venue. digital does ambience too, of course, but just not as completely.
i have some superb digital live recordings, but my best analog one's are degrees better. YMMV.
my room supports deep bass; my speakers (on paper) are -3db @ 7hz, -6db @ 3hz. so very linear in the teens. with lots of amplification headroom. if the media has it, i hear it. i like 'sneaky' bass; i only want it when it's really there. and i found that my highs improved (became more real and lively) when my deep bass was optimized. lots of HF overtones in the deep bass.
an interesting exercise is to listen to how a room can 'hook up' and the venue get defined when the music starts between tracks or the lead in groove. depending on the deep bass extension of the system. quite different analog verses digital. different from recording to recording for sure, but my experience is that analog just generally does it better and more predictably. that is a significant part of realism in a recording. do our senses get it, how do our bodies react? do my shoulders relax? how much? that ease, flow and liquidity in the music. am i sucked in? and my digital is good at this too, but not where my analog is.
And it works. I noticed changes/improvements in your system without you writing about it.
Tim, I don't need to explain for the umpteenth time why I do not post system videos, as so many others on WBF do not do as well, for similar reasons.
on Saturday i had some visitors; two long time friends and WBF members and a music lover/non audiophile. we began with a track list my friend brought of a dozen excellent well recorded country/folk vocals on streaming digital. "his" music he lives with daily.Now you are describing sound characteristics after all, Mike. That's great! I wouldn't mind more of this.
Cucumber and capers on smoked salmon?Well, I'll have a smoked salmon ciabatta sandwich later on, with cucumber and capers. From my favorite café around here.
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