As always Pyrrho, thanks...
I will check that out ASAP...thanks...
Oh brother...so are you telling me that SACD, under normal circumstances unless there's been some kind of remix or remastering done, doesn't offer sonic benefits over standard CD? Is that true of just about every title?
The format is theoretically superior, being able to give you a wider dynamic range and wider frequency response. But given the fact that the CD format has enough dynamic range for reasonable purposes (most CDs do not use all of the dynamic range capability of the CD format, or even close to it), and covers all of the audible frequencies, the improvements are not going to be heard.
For more on that, see:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Super_Audio_CD#Audible_differences_compared_to_PCM.2FCD
(And if you don't like Wikipedia, use the links at the bottom to take you to their sources. In this instance, Wikipedia sums up the situation quite well for anyone not wanting to read a lot of material. But if anyone is reading this who does not like Wikipedia, use the links.)
Now, if they did a better job of mastering the SACD than the CD, then it will sound better. But that makes it audibly no different from a CD that has better mastering than another CD.
And, of course, there can be 5.1 channels of material on an SACD, so it can be better in that way, but that is irrelevant to 2 channel playback.
It seems to me then that I should just stick with redbook media...I wouldn't be using this in any sort of multichannel way, just stereo, so for the most part are stereo SACDs not that much different sounding from their CD counterparts? There is no sonic improvement at all?
As I said, if the mastering is different, then it may sound different.
Okay, so I'd be able to run analog stereo outs to my stereo receiver if the SACD changer offers them?
Yes.
Outside of the Sony, do you know of any multi disc SACD changers?
Yamaha has made some with DVD playback capability, so they would be listed with their DVD players. My first SACD player was (and is) a Yamaha DVD-C750, which is a 5 disc carousel changer. I also have an Oppo single disc player that plays SACDs.
I know Denon, Marantz, and Pioneer have all made single disc SACD players, but I do not know about changers. Other than Sony, Marantz (and probably Philips), most manufacturers would probably have the SACD format along with DVD capability.
Here is a listing of manufacturers who have made SACD players, but I do not know how many of them have made SACD changers:
http://www.sa-cd.net/faq#playback14
But wouldn't any SACD player/changer also play CDs?
Yes. But CD players cannot play standard SACDs. But if it is a hybrid SACD, then CD players can play them (but only the CD layer, not the SACD layer). Most SACDs are hybrid SACDs, but not all of them.
I see -- thanks for your opinion here; for the most part, there aren't that many outstanding sounding SACDs out there, huh?
Properly recorded multichannel SACDs sound substantially better than 2 channel recordings, if one has a proper setup and sits in the appropriate location.
With many classical multichannel SACDs, with a properly set up system, sitting in the proper position, one does not directly notice the surround channels at all, and it seems as though all of the sound is coming from the front. But one can get up and approach the rear channels and then notice that sound is coming from them. The sound represents reflected sound if you were in an auditorium, and the effect is the closest to realistic reproduction of music I have ever heard. I think the center front is also a benefit, but if I used an inferior center speaker the way that many people do, I might feel otherwise due to not properly reproducing the center channel.
It helps that with my surround system, all of my speakers, other than subwoofers, are identical. And they are good. And I have taken the time and trouble to set up my system (which is not that hard with a modern receiver that has an automatic setup, but some people manage to bungle it anyway).
Two of the titles that caught my eye and which I have on standard CD were Journey's Greatest Hits and the first awesome Boston album...