Is this vinyl revival thing just a load of nonsense?

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Rob998

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Well with a digital master, it all depends how wide you open the gates. If you only set them to comply with the red book standard, then you chop the very tops & bottoms off the sine wave. But you can open the gates wider & let more information through.

I met , through my motorbike club, a guy who is a very well respected recording engineer, specialising in classical music. He said there is, theoretically, absolutely no limit to what you can record digitally, unless you set the limits. He also said there is no way on the planet that he'd want to go back to analogue recording, after working with (admittedly the very best) digital equipment.
 

sthomas048

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I recently bought myself a new turntable after many years of cd players. Never got the sound I wanted from cds. First thing is finding good music which is tricky enough these days, but then it has to sound good on playback. Listening to my turntable is like lifting the veil off cd sound to let you hear everything. Id never go back to cd now and wouldnt touch digital downloads with a barge pole since getting my TT. But thats just me and my ears.
 

CnoEvil

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rob998 said:
I met , through my motorbike club, a guy who is a very well respected recording engineer, specialising in classical music. He said there is, theoretically, absolutely no limit to what you can record digitally, unless you set the limits. He also said there is no way on the planet that he'd want to go back to analogue recording, after working with (admittedly the very best) digital equipment.

Rob, did your guy happen to mention if there was much of an audible difference between 16 bit and 24 bit.
 

Rob998

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Sorry, CNo, it was a chat over a few beers & I don't recall discussing bit-rates, other than him saying that he always records in the highest possible quality & what comes out on CD is a pale imitation of what's been recorded. He liked SACD as a format & (this was a couple of years ago) was interested in blu-ray as a high quality format.
 

CnoEvil

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rob998 said:
Sorry, CNo, it was a chat over a few beers & I don't recall discussing bit-rates, other than him saying that he always records in the highest possible quality & what comes out on CD is a pale imitation of what's been recorded. He liked SACD as a format & (this was a couple of years ago) was interested in blu-ray as a high quality format.

That's a shame. I thought I was going to get some first hand "hearsay" to back up my view. :shifty:
 

Rob998

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I do remember him not being keen on downloading though, he was still an advocate of physical media. There was mention of solid state storage and he said that would be good, but he doubted it would ever happen on a commercial basis.

if i come across him again at one of our big meets I'll ask him for you!
 

gbhsi1

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RickP200 said:
There seem to more turntables in hi-fi shops than I've seen in about 20 years. Now don't get me wrong, I can understand someone who has a large collection of vinyl or someone collecting rare records wanting to make the most of their investment by buying a decent deck. What I don't understand is the craze teens have for new vinyl - a mate said recently that some kids believe that the only true way to listen to music is on record. Now records make sense when the original recording format is analogue, but with more and more music being recorded digitally I can only see records detracting from the original sound - why add in all kinds of mechanical problems into the delivery of music when they don't need to be present?

Am I the only one that thinks this way??

I'm 36 and actually use all three mediums to listen to my music, but for the best sound quality I would say this has to go to vinyl :) Whichever format you use its how the music played makes you feel...thats the most important part! When you are smiling from ear to ear - you have nailed it!
 
A

Anonymous

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The recent popularity of vinyl long play records comes from several sources. One might be the recent "vintage" status of vinyl LP records, as we are now are at least two generations removed from their heyday. Historically, the LP records were at the height of their popularity in the 1980s, then replaced to a large degree by the cassette tape, and, even more so later on by the CD and the mp3 or other compressed digital music formats and related mp3 players. The other source of the popularity of the vinyl records is the popularity of the rap music and its successor hip hop. The DJs who play this kind of music are famous for their sound manipulations such as "scratches", and transitions from one song to the other, which can only be properly implemented manually, using two turntables with vinyl LP records playing on both of them simultaneously.

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Thaiman

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Helmut80 said:
Vinyl impresses the ladies. 'Oh baby, my DAC's got asynchronus USB' does not work with the ladies.

Try one with Firewire then ;)

On the serious note, For most people Vinyl never gone away, they just boxed up and kept in the loft.
 
Never put mine in the loft. Always kept them on display. That way if any friends came round and commented "Oh you still play records do you?" it was an ideal situation to put an LP on and blow their socks off!! Vinyl is still alive and kicking alright, in mine and many other households, by the sound of it. On a further point I have noticed a version of the lastest Leonard Cohen vinyl comes accompanied by a CD, now there's a cunning ploy! :cheers:
 

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