We've touched on the issue of Blu-rays before but I'm still puzzled by the high number of defective discs. The Abbado Mahler cycle have quite a few issues, as do some Naxos ones. OpusArte seem the best by far, and Accentus look/sound impressive. The Euroarts disc of the opening concert at Salzburg 2010 is the latest botch, the PCM stereo mix more like a mono radio recording from the 1960s and the 1080p picture surprisingly soft. When the format's USP is superior picture and sound - and it's more expensive than DVD - this is just unforgivable.
BD blues
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I haven't tried blu-ray - with the defective disc scenario why should I? - but once again I think it is a case of the technology being put on the market before it is ready. Disenchantment from punters will kill it stone dead if the manufacturers don't get their act together."The sound is the handwriting of the conductor" - Bernard Haitink
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I've been using BD since a free player arrived with a new Sony telly when they were still doing battle with the other HD format discs, maybe 3 years ago. I've never bought (I must have around 40) or rented a defective one, this is the first I've heard of there being a problem."...the isle is full of noises,
Sounds and sweet airs, that give delight and hurt not.
Sometimes a thousand twangling instruments
Will hum about mine ears, and sometime voices..."
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Mahlerei
Petrushka
I'd say the format is just fine, it's sloppy authoring that's the big problem. A good BD on a 1080p screen and plumbed into a decent hifi is quite an experience.
caliban
The Abbado Mahler problems are well documented, and I've had issues with two Naxos discs - one refused to play and the other, the Wit Mahler 8, has a surround mix that seems to have been artificially created. I've also seen criticism of some ballet discs that suffer from so-called motion blur. The most disappointing has to be the Salzburg 2010 concert, although that was a review copy. It sounds fine in the mixed down surround layer though. Some labels are also rather coy about identifying the soundtracks in terms of bit-rates, merely saying they are created from 'HD sources'.Last edited by Guest; 03-10-11, 23:30.
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Mahlerei, I've got the Wit Mahler 8 blu-ray for a round-up review, but haven't tried it yet... will do so soon.
Do try and see the new Mariinsky blu-ray - their first - of Tchaikovsky 4-6. Superb.Our chief weapon is surprise...surprise and fear...fear and surprise.... Our two weapons are fear and surprise...and ruthless efficiency....
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Mahlerei
Hello IGI
I'm sure you won't be disappointed by the Wit Mahler 8, certainly not in the PCM stereo version. i have the Gatti Elektra to review tomorrow and the Chailly Mahler 2 and 8 and Thielemann Beethoven box as well.
Thanks for the tip re the Mariinsky Tchaikovsky. I take it you have the Acosta Romeo and Juliet? By far the best all-round ballet BD I've seen to date. The Dutch Ballet's Don Quichotte not far behind.Last edited by Guest; 03-10-11, 23:31.
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Pilchardman
Originally posted by Petrushka View PostI haven't tried blu-ray - with the defective disc scenario why should I? - but once again I think it is a case of the technology being put on the market before it is ready. Disenchantment from punters will kill it stone dead if the manufacturers don't get their act together.
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Slightly distorting the theme of the thread - not so much 'blues' as BD audio - I've just ordered a new player for my surround system which adds BluRay to the current SACD/CD/DVD mix. While I already have a BD video player (so have some of the Abbado Mahler, some opera already), are there any recommendable BluRay audio discs out there? I was somewhat taken aback by the comments about the Mahler 8 so any recommendations gratefully received. I've got the 2L Trondheim Soloists Bartok/Britten disc in SACD so I know that sounds astonishingly good but I was wondering about other Naxos issues.
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There's a forthcoming 2L called "Souvenir" - see http://2l.no/ - on my to-get list.
I still haven't fixed myself up with a BD player as connecting to a Linn Unidisk SC seems a problem.
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Originally posted by Petrushka View PostI haven't tried blu-ray - with the defective disc scenario why should I? - but once again I think it is a case of the technology being put on the market before it is ready. Disenchantment from punters will kill it stone dead if the manufacturers don't get their act together.
The leap in picture and sound quality over standard DVDs is massive, assuming of course that you have the equipment to do the format justice.Patriotism is supporting your country all the time, and your government when it deserves it.
Mark Twain.
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Alf-Prufrock
Originally posted by french frank View PostWhat does BD stand for?
I have 42 of them now, and not one was faulty. The leap in quality over DVD is staggering, in my opinion, and that includes the sound. I even have two operas in 7.1 sound, which I can play, and the all-round ambience is wonderful. But even the 5.1 discs are excellent.
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Mahlerei
In principle Blu-ray should be superior to DVD in every respect but I've been surprised at the number of Blu-rays with authoring problems and variable sound and picture quality. The very best ones are indeed staggering - the Acosta Romeo & Juliet and Chailly's Mahler 2 for instance - but they are the exception, not the rule. And given that they sell at a hefty premium over the equivalent DVDs that ain't good enough.
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