Originally posted by Ferretfancy
View Post
Meridian were - historically at least - keen technical advocates of DVD-A (i.e hi-res pcm, 24/96 and up, but on an actual physical disc) in the damp-squib format war with SACD... the DVD-A format was of course stymied by constant disagreements between its promoters about sonically-degrading copy-protection measures (some of which found their way, very audibly, onto CDs e.g. Warners Elatus) and about "backwards compatibility"... which led to those double-sided discs with CD on the other side, which some players didn't like at all (or it turned out, some prospective purchasers either...), and the need for a screen to navigate the TOC... all that just to play some music?
Latterly Meridian have put their weight behind another download format, MQA..... a whole other story.
As for SACDs, those recently discussed Blomstedt/Gewandhaus/Bruckner discs are hybrids of that kind, and they sound lovely here off of their CD layer.... despite some suspicions, I can't say I've consistently found sonic compromises with such issues.... the BIS Skalkottas and Dausgaard Schumann are fine too... it may be player dependent, but my transports are 1990s Krell and Marantz dedicated Redbook, and they sound fine with them.
But....
The other night, the Krell 300CD refused to play any track off that very Bruckner 2; I couldn't recall having the problem last year - perhaps I'd used the Marantz, I wasn't sure. So I slipped in the Marigo 3D Signature Mat (the Gold/Green one with 9 cut-outs, which I use wrong-way-up i.e gold side up).... and it played without a hitch. It can work, though the sound may change too, not necessarily in a way you'd like.
(Bear in mind that Krell recommend against such things due to the design of the TEAC transport...). So as I said upthread, if you have them around, it's always worth trying CD Mats on a difficult disc. Most transports won't mind - it will simply growl a bit, and/or come straight back out if incompatible - except I wouldn't try them in slot-loaders.
Comment