Hey guys, thanks for reading and commenting. I thought I'd chime in here:
@Nestor - I won't claim to know everything about Redbook except that it uses CD sampling and bit-rates... which is no problem at all. My main point is... "hi-res" is really just shorthand for
quality. No, I don't believe there's anything magical about 24/96 and CD-quality should be fine... so to in answer to your question... No reason.
@hankki and GO-NAD, I am in Canada and also suffer from unavailable titles. I wish it weren't the case but licensing is a pain and so are borders.
GO-NAD
"...subject to the quality of the master tapes. The album could be high resolution, but could still be dynamically compressed, couldn't it? Or, does this compression take place "downstream"?"
In terms of audio-purity the master recording taken at the session is as close to the source as it gets. However there are plenty of processes the sound undergoes during and after that session that
could go into the master tape... including compression.
So, (going out on a limb and speaking for HDT, but in no way do I represent the company) what you're buying from HD Tracks is the retail audio-recording produced by the owner (studio) and not some guy making music files from his collection on a home computer.
Any and all
compression is tricky to avoid in digital files. By definition any digital file is compressed in some way. FLAC is lossless but still a form of compression, just not evil. But I would call any digital audio as a "compressed" form of analog.
I think the least compressed "digital" format is the wav file which I believe you can buy from HD Tracks.
What I like about buying from a legal source and not downloading free from Bit Torrent, which is an obvious elephant in the room... people
are going to do it.
But what you get from a legal source is accountability for the quality. In other words, anytime you buy a song in a lossless format you're getting something the record label stands behind ... if you're buying a hi-res file you're buying what the label says is the best sound you'll get from this recording until some future re-master of the recording is released.
Personally, I digitized all my CDs a long time ago and stopped buying them. Yes, I downloaded a lot of MP3's from file sharing programs in the early 2000s but they sounded like crap on my hi-fi system. Ironically when I discovered Napster and Lime Wire I bought more music than at any time in my life (on CD which I digitized in lossless codec).
Now with HD Tracks I don't mind throwing in some of its recordings into my collection for either important classic albums I love or experimenting with new stuff that sounds great.
I find the price agreeable. Obviously it's not free like it would be if I "stole" it off a bit-torrent. But I've spent way more on DVD-Audio discs and CDs than the equivalent digital file on HD Tracks.