Gentleman,
If you play LP's on a Silvertone changer, handed down from your
dad, listen on a system from Best Buy, You'll concur with this
posting.
With all due respect to those that posted to this topic, Vinyl
cleaned properly, played on a top of the line TT - arm - cartridge
set up will sound good enough to shiver your timbers. In some cases,
the cost of a vinyl playback system to shiver your timbers may
cost as much as a a fine German sports car.
Until you hear vinyl on a GREAT system, you won't realize how good
the medium of the past really is.
Being an analog guy myself; CD's, digital and pro tools take
second place to the sound my Ampex ATR , Koetsu, Dynavector and My
Sonic Labs cartridges deliver. Being 66 years of age, I may be
wrong but my ears are happy.
Relax, and enjoy the music. Ken
On Aug 27, 2008, at 9:14 PM, Charles Lawson wrote:
Tom Fine writes:
The LP has just too many limitations -- fuzzy midrange on peaks,
ticks
and pops, rumble
and surface noise, poor channel separation at certain frequencies.
It's
always amazing to me when
the things sound great -- I tip my hat to the mastering folks and
pressing folks who make that
happen. I'm old enough to remember the era before CD's. NO THANKS!
I’m right there with you, Tom. I’d never go back.
I hope it was clear from my postings that I am not *advocating*
using disc
restorations as the preferred method of transferring older
recordings to
the digital realm. I am only noting that, in some cases when the
master
tapes have deteriorated far enough, disc restorations can yield a
more
listenable product than the bad masters. OF COURSE digital re-issues
should be made from original source materials if those materials are
well-cared-for and in good shape. However, I have heard (and own a
few)
major label CD re-issues that suffer from all sorts of problems
that the
same material originally issued on LP does not exhibit—and it’s not
just
poor quality-control at the digital remastering stage.
The LP as a medium has all kinds of problems that bug me (as LPs
always
have!), but some of my old LPs when thoroughly cleaned and played
through
the LT with DSP EQ, etc. yield a more listenable product than some
of the
CD re-issues that supposedly use original masters. Properly
manufactured
vinyl will generally hold up better than audio tape. It’s just
physics.
I am booked up pretty solidly for the next little while, but if I
can put
together a few A-Bs, I’ll be happy to share ’em.
Chas.
--
Charles Lawson <clawson@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Professional Audio for CD, DVD, Broadcast & Internet