Originally posted by jayne lee wilson
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CDs as investment?
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Originally posted by jayne lee wilson View PostGoodness... I don't recognise that description of these 20x128 Rakhmaninov remasters...they sound utterly gorgeous played on [Jayne here self-censors a lengthy, detailed and boastful description of her CD replay systems]...
...having a custom-rebuilt Marantz CD player helps! Whoops, that bit slipped out...
I enjoy vinyl, and have a good system to play it on, but all too often people fail to match like with like, and I think that cheaper CD players often under perform when compared to up market vinyl. I don't have a Marantz, mine's Meridian, and this make the subjective performance of the two formats very similar.
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Beef Oven
Originally posted by MrGongGong View Post
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Beef Oven
Originally posted by Eine Alpensinfonie View PostRe vinyl - I never regretted its passing. I can remember listening to new LPs, bolt upright, worrying constantly that there might be a click or a swish at any moment. I bought my first CD and player on Day 1 (1.03.83) and was converted instantly.
I persevered with LPs and did not convert (no pun!) until '89.
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Originally posted by Beef Oven View PostThis pretty much somes up my experience with LPs. What was worse than worrying about what clicks and pops might be coming, was the horrible anticipation of that click that we knew was there!
I persevered with LPs and did not convert (no pun!) until '89.
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Originally posted by cloughie View PostFor me, the thought that a machine that had no physical contact with the disc was bound to be better long-term, first CD player 1985. The quiet start of Firebird and Daphnis with no surface noise or clicks, this was the future!
whereas now I have in many of the software applications that I use plugins that generate precisely the same noises, eq settings that will simulate cassette and bit reduction that will make high quality recordings sound "old"
For those people who never experienced low fi not as a choice but as simply what it is , the scratches and clicks are simply more sounds to explore.
Much of the electronic (live and otherwise) music I listen to (and sometimes make) is full of these things which have now been recontextualised as musical sounds ................. so Cage was right all along
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Originally posted by MrGongGong View PostFor those people who never experienced low fi not as a choice but as simply what it is , the scratches and clicks are simply more sounds to explore.
Much of the electronic (live and otherwise) music I listen to (and sometimes make) is full of these things which have now been recontextualised as musical sounds ................. so Cage was right all along
All that means is that Cage was mad too.
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Originally posted by MrGongGong View PostIs the record noise from the nightingale recording in The Pines Of Rome music ?
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Originally posted by Eine Alpensinfonie View PostYou know that very thought occurred to me when I first heard this work at a concert performance in Manchester. The programme note said it was scored for "a gramophone record", but at the time of its composition, this would have sounded dire. (Do HIPP enthusiasts insist in an acoustically recorded nightingale? )
It should be on a wind up gramophone with a player in full tails performing it ! I heard a dreadful version at the RFH a few years ago where the nightingale was played through the PA so that it had no sense of spatial location at all
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Originally posted by Eine Alpensinfonie View PostYou know that very thought occurred to me when I first heard this work at a concert performance in Manchester. The programme note said it was scored for "a gramophone record", but at the time of its composition, this would have sounded dire. (Do HIPP enthusiasts insist in an acoustically recorded nightingale? )
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Originally posted by MrGongGong View PostOf course
It should be on a wind up gramophone with a player in full tails performing it ! I heard a dreadful version at the RFH a few years ago where the nightingale was played through the PA so that it had no sense of spatial location at all
Interesting that it was scored for gramophone record, imagine having a real nightingale on the concert platform - definitely a case for not including animals or children in performance!
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#38 Dave 2002. Belated thanks for that post. Of those three items:
1. CBS Classics was a bargain re-issue label.
2. This is a UK CBS stereo full price original.
3. This is an early Philips stereo full price original in the 'Hi-Fi Stereo' series.
In terms of value, you'd get next to nothing for 1., a relatively modest amount for 2. and a bit more for 3., though Philips dont fetch the big money that similar vintage Decca, HMV and Columbia go for.
English CBS (SBRG series for the stereos) sell for rather little, whereas English Columbias (SAX series for the stereos) fetch big money. I'm told collectors believe that English CBS engineering wasnt very good, whereas English Columbia were produced by Walter Legge and are highly regarded. Personally, English CBS sound fine to me and I'm very happy to perpetuate the story if it keeps the price down.
#40 cloughie. Thanks for that information, these label complexities get very confusing!
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