Originally posted by CallMePaul
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Shrinking CD length
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Originally posted by MickyD View PostI'm truly astonished by the number of new releases each month from Brilliant Classics, most of them being of rare répertoire and all new recordings. The baroque and early classical era is particularly well covered, to the extent that I find it well nigh impossible keeping up with them all. Somebody must be buying them!
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Originally posted by Retune View PostThey also have an interesting specialist piano label, Piano Classics, that seems to release a couple of CDs a month. I first came across them as Zlata Chochieva's original label, before she signed to Naive.
Études-Tableaux, Op. 33, 39
Chopin Variations, Sonata 1
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Originally posted by gurnemanz View Post
I got the Brilliant Classics Rachmaninov Complete Piano Music at a barely resistible download price from Presto. It includes many recommendable recordings, some originally from Piano Classics, including two from Zlata Chochieva, (each of which as single discs would cost the same as the whole nine hours' worth of that complete collection)
Études-Tableaux, Op. 33, 39
Chopin Variations, Sonata 1
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Originally posted by richardfinegold View PostWell, if a big box reissue happens and I am moderately interested, I feel some urgency, knowing it won’t be around long.
There is a lot of talk about people using their computers here for streaming services. I strongly recommend a dedicated streamer. Much better sound, features such as AirPlay and Chromecast, and no annoying computer related distractions. They also look like proper audio components and have become very inexpensive.
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Originally posted by Petrushka View PostOn the opposite side to short length on CDs, it's been wonderful to have Wagner's Ring available complete on 1 Blu-ray disc without any need for side changes.
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I have to acknowledge the right of every music lover to listen with equipment that suits them.
That said, for myself I'm with you m-a, resistant to branded components that have IT integrated in them and will inevitably become redundant with "upgrades" (cf Sonos, I'm sure there are others but I stopped reading/scanning audio magazines etc. a long time ago). And manufacturer takeovers or disappearance.
I see Chromecast audios* are going to become "unsupported" by Google at a date they have announced but I only paid £15 each for them. (*In the right set up they will output bit perfect audio to a DAC).
Originally posted by mikealdren View PostI think this depends on how your computer is set up, I feed the digital output from my computer so a high quality external DAC and the sound is superb but the computer's internal DAC is very poor......
Originally posted by mikealdren View PostI firmly believe (and my ears confirm to my satisfaction) that while the signal remains digital, bits are bits and the equipment used to process this side of things rarely affects the sound.
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Originally posted by mikealdren View Post
I think this depends on how your computer is set up, I feed the digital output from my computer so a high quality external DAC and the sound is superb but the computer's internal DAC is very poor. I firmly believe (and my ears confirm to my satisfaction) that while the signal remains digital, bits are bits and the equipment used to process this side of things rarely affects the sound.
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It's a shame about the audio Chromecast, but if you have a component like a receiver that has HDMI connections you can use a regular Chromecast or some other streaming device (even a Raspberry Pi running a DLNA renderer if you are geeky enough) to do much the same thing. Everything stays digital until it hits the receiver's DAC, so there should be no loss of quality upstream of the DAC. A receiver may well have things like Chromecast, Airplay, or DLNA built in, though long-term support for integrated technology like this can be flaky. Using a plug-in device to handle the streaming will be pretty much future-proof as long as HDMI is around. You might just need to buy another cheap dongle at some point, or if you are a Raspberry Pi nerd, update your software (an advantage that open platforms have over things like Sonos, where you are at the mercy of their support policy).
The source of the music can be some streaming service on your phone or tablet, or it can be your own music stored on the device (1TB microSD cards are cheap these days), or if you want to get fancy, an external media server. Most apps won't give you gapless playback when streaming locally stored music via Chromecast, but Hi-Fi Cast is one that does (if you enable gapless mode).
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Today's Guardian has an article that suggests that CDs are on the way out.
The car was the last bastion of the CD and the full-length album. Now they are no more | Tim DowlingNew cars are no longer being equipped with CD players – who can doubt that the end of the format is nigh, asks Guardian contributor Tim Dowling
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Hmm... I can't help feeling that this is journalist-seeking-reputation. There are still plenty of Cassette tape fans. They may stop making and selling new CDs but there are enough around to ensure people will still play CDs until the earth becomes uninhabitable . And who would have predicted the return of 'Vinyl' ? Or Gramophone records, as I still call them .
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Originally posted by Pulcinella View PostToday's Guardian has an article that suggests that CDs are on the way out.
https://www.theguardian.com/commenti...ers-end-format
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CDs now redundant? *
This piece relates more to pop, kids' entertainment etc but it's an interesting view of 'the CD'.
The car was the last bastion of the CD and the full-length album. Now they are no more | Tim DowlingNew cars are no longer being equipped with CD players – who can doubt that the end of the format is nigh, asks Guardian contributor Tim Dowling
* I can't find a better existing thread
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According to the BPI, 11.6 million CDs were sold in the UK in 2022. Although numbers were down slightly last year, income from CD sales actually increased by about 10% in 2023 to around £97M.
Streaming and downloads numbers are much bigger, but I would suggest that CDs will still be available for many more years yet."I do not approve of anything that tampers with natural ignorance. Ignorance is like a delicate exotic fruit; touch it and the bloom is gone. The whole theory of modern education is radically unsound. Fortunately in England, at any rate, education produces no effect whatsoever. If it did, it would prove a serious danger to the upper classes, and probably lead to acts of violence in Grosvenor Square."
Lady Bracknell The importance of Being Earnest
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Originally posted by richardfinegold View Post
I used computers as my streamer/ servers for a while, and it’s possible to get excellent sound. A streamer after all is just a networking computer in the casing of an audio component. Ultimately it ice it makes annoying to have a computer in the audio chain for many reasons, one of which is that it makes it difficult to use a computer for other tasks. I therefore was using an old laptop for years and that brought its own set of issues
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