Dr. Mark Waldrep at AIX
Good article, which I have scanned but not read with total focus. Shame you could not have talked with Mark Waldrep Ph.D, owner and chief engineer at Aix Records. He has loads of experience in making audio disks and now has a fantastic new studio in Santa Monica. Besides making Aix DVD-As, he does lots of other work in the recording industry, apparently. But his Aix disks are his masterpieces. They are the highest quality recorded audio I have ever heard. They are simply stunning. He reveals a little of his technique on his website at
www.aixrecords.com. No EQ, no artificial reverb, no heavy digital processing. Every disk is recorded live on hard drives, and no old tapes from the 70s (or any other time) are ever used. I bought about 12 DVD-As before I found Aix, and they all sounded horrible because that is what they were doing. Dr. Waldrep exploits the DVD-A format perfectly. His disks "Nitty Gritty Surround", Surf City Allstars "I Get Surround", and "Brand New Opry" are just breath-taking. Bach's Brandenberg Concerto is too. I very strongly urge all audiophiles to try Aix. His disks are dual-disks too, with DVD-A on one side, if you can play that format, and DTS 5.1 with video on the other side if you can't. I can't hear a difference. Because Dr. Waldrep has B and W speakers in the rear at home, I recently bought a pair of B-W CDM-9NTs for my rear speakers on e-Bay for only $1,975. Probably the Onkyo TX-NR905 is in my future. I have mighty Allison Ones in the front. Try the four disks mentioned above, and you will be grateful to me forever.
I am also surprised that you did not mention that Dolby True HD and DTS HD Master Audio are on the way. The new receivers coming soon will have those codecs, and I think audio-only discs encoded with them will appear before long. Dolby True is the DVD-A standard, using Meridian Lossless Packing, only in 7.1 instead of 5.1 channels. I believe that the appearance of these two new formats in players and receivers heralds a vast new age of surround sound. DVD-A became a niche market (it did not fail and disappear because Aix Records is in business today and Dr. Waldrep keeps producing and selling large numbers of disks) mainly because of the sloth and stupidity of the records companies that a) only thought to throw old tapes from the 70s on DVD-A disks and b) never spent a dime advertising the new format. Aix proves that when done right, DVD-A and the newer surround codecs are just fantastic.