
3db
Audioholic Slumlord
Its been my experience that its up to the recording engineer on what sounds better, not the medium itself. I have many recordings on both formats and there is no clear winner on format depending on the recording.
What are the evaluation criterias to say that a vinyl release is better than the CD?Of all the vinyl records originally released from 1994 onwards (meaning, no reissues of material recorded before 1994) I have compared to the CDs, only two albums very downright better on vinyl. There were several albums that were a matter of taste (and some I preferred on vinyl). This also goes for records from the last 5-7 years, although, admittedly, I haven't listened to many of those.
Maybe it wasn't so clear from my post, but I have so far compared 410 albums on vinyl and CD, and the results look like this:What are the evaluation criterias to say that a vinyl release is better than the CD?
If by objectivity, you are referring to the statistics you compiled, they are still based on your subjectivity and biases, especially if sight bias came into play.Maybe it wasn't so clear from my post, but I have so far compared 410 albums on vinyl and CD, and the results look like this:
* 410 albums compared
* 59 albums were better on vinyl, which is equivalent to 14.39 %.
* 128 albums were a matter of taste; or each media had its strengths and weaknesses; or they were practically identical (and then it would be arbitrary which media you would choose). This is equivalent to 31.21 %.
* 223 albums were better on CD, which is equivalent to 54.39 %.
However, I haven't done any statistics on the important categories: CDs from 1982-1993, CDs from 1994 onwards, Japanese CDs, and reissues of albums originally released before 1994, but I will at some point.
It will, invariably, be a somewhat objective evaluation whether the CD or the record sounds better, but I tried to be as objective as possible: Did you win something on one media without losing something, or did you lose so little that it was all worth it because of what you gained?
To be more specific it meant: How much of the music could you hear - not in the sense of "Ha! There's more treble on the CD so it's better", but simply if there was another dimension to the music on one media. Other than this it was clarity, nuances in the music, how well proportioned bass and treble were, how well-controlled the music was, how big and wide the soundstage was (or stereo perspective if you like), and simply: How pleasant was it to listen to?
Although I often preferred the CD when it was a matter of taste, I still put it into the taste category to get a somewhat objective result and also because it would be a matter of taste if the record could offer something that the CD couldn't.
2L makes phenomenal recordings. Unfortunately I don't have vinyl counterparts to compare.The examples are all ''old recordings''. I am curious what would have happened if you would have used modern day digital recordings from i.e. 2L or Reference Recordings.
Reference Recordings have been known for their vinyl and tape recordings but even ''prof'' Johnson is recording digital now.
This one is available as a Studio Master24/176 download and as vinyl. Anybody compared the two?;![]()
Jack your post is very intriguing to me. Please PM me so we can exchange further. There may be some writing oops here for you. Thx.I feared where to post such topics, but since you're an administrator, I guess this is the appropriate forum
A few years ago, and independent test was performed - could people tell the difference between (current) analog recordings and digital recording counterparts. To make a long story short, 50% of the time people were correct, 50% of the time they were incorrect. In other words, man's hearing isn't that good to detect the differences.
After a divorce about the mid '80's, I began collecting past music, mainly vinyl LPs and 45 singles. I'd listen to the fade-out of many 45 hit singles, and wondered why the fidelity improved as the volume weakened. In other words, man used audio compression even with vinyl records. I don't recall anyone claiming how sad that audio abuse was. The hit singles caused the songs to excel to sometimes #1 (Billboard Magazine) chart position.
As I later discovered, I estimate 15% of people demand HQ sound, the other 85% don't really care that much. It fall right inline with stereo mixes, the same 15% figure. That seemed odd at first, but later, no it's perfect. While I once thought EVERYONE in the ENTIRE world wanted Stereo mixes, I found they really don't care. Stereo, to me, is how to appreciate sound, because much less sound masking occurs than with monophonic mixes. Some like 4-5.1 Surround Sound where there are multiple discrete audio tracks, like Quadraphonic mixes, 4 Channel. They should sound even better than Stereo mixes with only two channels.
I look on YouTube and find posts "This is why I don't buy Remastered CDs!" and it shows a waveform (brick-walled, you might call it). Would they have still complained if they couldn't see the waveform? Probably not.
I fear mentioning any names here, those who claim to be "Audiophiles" as in remastering, it may upset some and ban me from this site - it has happened in the past, elsewhere. I don't mind a heated discussion, but, please, no name calling. I'd like to shake any hands even if we don't agree on a single topic, if you follow me.
Topics like:
A.) Should past music be remixed and remastered for the ultimate sound experience?
B.) Are MP3 really ugly in sound, even at low bit rates?
C.) Just how much audio distortion can people detect?
D.) Should sound (past analog recordings) be digitally enhanced?
E.) Are there audio benefits to louder sound mastering?
I'd like to, on occasion, post snippets (links) of material (songs) I mixed, popular songs that many may know, to help others decide. Should administrators feel uncomfortable with what I post, please privately contact me. Most of the material, you can find entire albums on YouTube in respectable sound quality. I'm not here to set up any trading.
My name is Jack, by the way, I live in NJ! Nice to meet you all, in advance!
I tried to make uncompressed FLAC, but it seems like none of the FLAC converters support this, it is clear that the format support uncompressed files, but implementation seem to be lagging.In response to your February update where you think one of your albums was not a lossless FLAC:-
FLAC by definition is lossless, hence FLAC stands for Free Lossless Audio Codec. There is no lossy version of FLAC. The file sizes can be different because if you have the time and processing power you can compress it more....but it is still lossless compression (think of a ZIP file where you can also choose how much it compresses but it always decompresses to exactly the same original). If you were compressing a large catalogue of WAV files you may choose not to maximise the compression because of the days it might take your PC to do it. You can even have FLAC that isn't compressed at all, resulting in file size the same as the equivalent WAV.
Unless you meant that you think someone has taken an mp3 and turned it into a FLAC which would be a really weird thing to do!
dBPowerAmp gives you the ability to take any source file (WAV from cd) and convert it to varying degrees of FLAC compression level's, including Compression Level 8(Best). Side Note: per the interface, "All are Lossless".I tried to make uncompressed FLAC, but it seems like none of the FLAC converters support this, it is clear that the format support uncompressed files, but implementation seem to be lagging.
Anyone out there that ever made uncompressed FLAC?
Any tips would be appreciated