Actually, if it weren't for Spotify, I would still buy CDs regularly. Probably almost half of the few downloads I've purchased have had faults on them which have required a few email exchanges to get sorted.
Buying CDs. Why?
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Originally posted by Phileas View PostActually, if it weren't for Spotify, I would still buy CDs regularly. Probably almost half of the few downloads I've purchased have had faults on them which have required a few email exchanges to get sorted.
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Originally posted by kea View PostI don't think the industry has quite figured out downloads yet—one reliably gets higher quality audio and better booklets from downloads of the, er, non-purchased variety. Or so people tell me
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Originally posted by kea View PostI don't think the industry has quite figured out downloads yet—one reliably gets higher quality audio and better booklets from downloads of the, er, non-purchased variety. Or so people tell me
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Originally posted by Eine Alpensinfonie View PostThat's right. I think of downloads as the modern equivalent of mass produced musicassettes.
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Originally posted by amateur51 View PostBut was she offered a cheery cuppa as well?
All for £12, which isn't bad ! I only had time to search through a couple of the heaped tables.
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Originally posted by amateur51 View PostBut was she offered a cheery cuppa as well?
Not bad for £12
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Originally posted by Phileas View PostActually, if it weren't for Spotify, I would still buy CDs regularly. Probably almost half of the few downloads I've purchased have had faults on them which have required a few email exchanges to get sorted.
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Originally posted by David-G View PostReally? How can a download have a fault? Do you mean that the files are corrupted? Do you have to play them through to check that there are no faults? Sounds like the old days when I would have to listen to new LPs right through to see if there were any scratches.
1. Gapless playback doesn't work!
2. Poor sound quality
3. Bad metadata
4. Can't download booklet and/or CD cover art
5. Missing tracks in a collection
6. Difficulty downloading track(s)
7. Tracks out of order
8. Incorrect codec or quality level
9. Can't download music
10. Completely wrong music downloaded
Is that enough for now?
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Originally posted by Dave2002 View PostPossible download faults:
1. Gapless playback doesn't work!
2. Poor sound quality
3. Bad metadata
4. Can't download booklet and/or CD cover art
5. Missing tracks in a collection
6. Difficulty downloading track(s)
7. Tracks out of order
8. Incorrect codec or quality level
9. Can't download music
10. Completely wrong music downloaded
Is that enough for now?
That and my wifi dying when I'm in the middle of downloading something (or have 269/270 MB).
But then lots of my CDs and LPs ended up getting scratched down the line as well—for instance it's been years since I heard the ending of Brahms's Academic Festival Overture, because a scratch on the one CD I have with it causes it to start skipping and glitching somewhere in the middle. I don't imagine there's ever going to be a 100% guaranteed problem-proof method of music acquisition.
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Originally posted by Dave2002 View PostI wouldn't know, but it amuses me (well, maybe not a lot ...) that some DVDs and Blu Rays come with dire warnings about copying, as well as trailers for things I don't want to watch etc. I gather that the, er, not purchased versions or pirate versions are much easier to handle! Farcical.
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Originally posted by David-G View PostReally? How can a download have a fault? Do you mean that the files are corrupted? Do you have to play them through to check that there are no faults? Sounds like the old days when I would have to listen to new LPs right through to see if there were any scratches.
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Originally posted by kea View PostOne I've noticed is when the entire disc is packed into a single FLAC/APE file with no cue sheet. Thus the only way to split the file into its component tracks is to open it in Audacity and do it manually. Always irritates me, especially when it's one of those discs with a single continuous piece split into like 20 tracks (why do recording companies do that anyway? Are we really meant to be listening to the Diabelli Variations on "shuffle" if we so choose?)
That and my wifi dying when I'm in the middle of downloading something (or have 269/270 MB).
But then lots of my CDs and LPs ended up getting scratched down the line as well—for instance it's been years since I heard the ending of Brahms's Academic Festival Overture, because a scratch on the one CD I have with it causes it to start skipping and glitching somewhere in the middle. I don't imagine there's ever going to be a 100% guaranteed problem-proof method of music acquisition.
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Originally posted by kea View PostBut then lots of my CDs and LPs ended up getting scratched down the line as well—for instance it's been years since I heard the ending of Brahms's Academic Festival Overture, because a scratch on the one CD I have with it causes it to start skipping and glitching somewhere in the middle. I don't imagine there's ever going to be a 100% guaranteed problem-proof method of music acquisition.
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Originally posted by Dave2002 View PostPossible download faults:
1. Gapless playback doesn't work!
2. Poor sound quality
3. Bad metadata
4. Can't download booklet and/or CD cover art
5. Missing tracks in a collection
6. Difficulty downloading track(s)
7. Tracks out of order
8. Incorrect codec or quality level
9. Can't download music
10. Completely wrong music downloaded
Is that enough for now?
12. The wrong track. I downloaded Mahler 5 (Rattle, BPO). I was looking forward to listening to this and got myself comfortable on the sofa. All went well until the final movement when I was rather taken aback to hear a string quartet playing.
The issue is not that there are errors but how frequently they occur.
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