Originally posted by jayne lee wilson
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Music On Blu-ray
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Originally posted by Bryn View PostI have to say that I find the rejection of Blu-ray to place in question anyone's claim to audiophilia. As a distribution format for high definition audio it is still fairly young but some, such as LSO Live, are exploiting it with considerable imagination. The Blu-ray in their fairly recent boxed set of Rattle's PeM, for instance, not only holds 2-channel stereo and surround recordings playable directly from the disc, but copyable high definition FLACs, plus mp3s, etc. Accompanying the Blu-ray disc are 3 hybrid SACDs, so plenty of opportunities for audio fidelity comparison. The performance is not too bad, either.
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Originally posted by richardfinegold View PostI think that you seem to have missed the point that great MC can be achieved at minimum expenditure. The gains in ambience, in spatial perception, and other factors can be achieved with mid Fi equipment that while sounding pretty decent in Stereo, completely enters a new realm in MC. Yes, it would be great to have the kind of equipment that Rubinson has, but it isn’t necessary. MC, especially when combined with a good Room correction program, is a great leveler. Champagne results on a beer budget
has to be there and it isn't, or not yet, with multi-channel or blu-ray...(looking at all the extras in that Rattle Pelleas set...well, great, but I wouldn't have much use for most of them really...I just want to dwell upon the music itself now.)
I love my present stereo rig... the music is centre stage in every way (and feels even more important now), which is when I'm happiest (and more adventurous in repertoire, always a good sign with me...). So right now, I dont want to put new equipment, i.e. system-building, back in the foreground of my attention again.
I find fault with so much gear it usually makes choice, or system alteration, quite stressful!
There are many ways to be an audiophile beyond the fashion for the newest media (I retain a keen interest in earlier CD players, and still fantasise about a 2ndhand Marantz CD7 (one of KI's own favourite 90s designs....the other one is sitting over there...)., not to mention the Unicornian CD/DA12.....), and as I said above, I wonder how many listeners have experienced really good, tangible, large-scale stereo imagery etc.? It took me long enough after all...
I used to have the ringdac Arcam Alpha 9 CD player and I thought well, this is it....Out came the CD23... it put the '9 to shame for 3D realism..."my god I've only just BEGUN...
Then came the Krell, the ATCs, the Harbeths...much trial and error.... I follow my heart to find my sound, we all have our own story...multi-ch remains the path not taken....
(Yet...)
Last edited by jayne lee wilson; 23-04-19, 03:53.
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I just noticed this stereo Blu Ray Audio - https://www.amazon.co.uk/Beethoven-F...QTCCNEZN1FPNFZ - Bernstein, Beethoven Fidelio
LPCM 2.0 so no surround sound advantage, but will get all the music on one disc.
I wonder if the Blu Ray does sound any better than the CDs it comes with. If this is a new trend, then perhaps eventually as more of these bundles are sold, we will be able to make a list of Blu Rays, with a relative evaluation of the CDs versus the Blu Rays.
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Originally posted by Keraulophone View PostBBM does.
Brewed just across the Truro River from my house, in this small but almost perfectly formed city.
It’s the favoured brew of the Lay Vicars of the cathedral choir, resampled after (almost) every evening service.
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Originally posted by Dave2002 View PostI just noticed this stereo Blu Ray Audio - https://www.amazon.co.uk/Beethoven-F...QTCCNEZN1FPNFZ - Bernstein, Beethoven Fidelio
LPCM 2.0 so no surround sound advantage, but will get all the music on one disc.
I wonder if the Blu Ray does sound any better than the CDs it comes with. If this is a new trend, then perhaps eventually as more of these bundles are sold, we will be able to make a list of Blu Rays, with a relative evaluation of the CDs versus the Blu Rays.
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Originally posted by HighlandDougie View PostAs to the question of sound quality of the CDs vs the Blu-Ray, the Blu-Ray remastering is aurally superior. Comparison made using the Pioneer UDP LX-800. Same applies to Kempff’s Schubert, Amadeus Beethoven, Kubelik Mahler etc etc. However, even Blu-Ray can’t turn sows’ ears, recording-wise, into silk purses so what didn’t sound wonderful in 1969 is not going to sound wonderful in 2019. Some of the Kertesz Dvorak issues fall into that category IMV.
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Originally posted by HighlandDougie View PostAs to the question of sound quality of the CDs vs the Blu-Ray, the Blu-Ray remastering is aurally superior. Comparison made using the Pioneer UDP LX-800. Same applies to Kempff’s Schubert, Amadeus Beethoven, Kubelik Mahler etc etc. However, even Blu-Ray can’t turn sows’ ears, recording-wise, into silk purses so what didn’t sound wonderful in 1969 is not going to sound wonderful in 2019. Some of the Kertesz Dvorak issues fall into that category IMV.
It is still possible to enjoy some of the recordings from earlier years, but sometimes the transfers and reconstructions from the material which remains are just too poor to be enjoyed for their sound quality - though the performances which they captured may still be of high merit.
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Originally posted by HighlandDougie View PostAs to the question of sound quality of the CDs vs the Blu-Ray, the Blu-Ray remastering is aurally superior. Comparison made using the Pioneer UDP LX-800. Same applies to Kempff’s Schubert, Amadeus Beethoven, Kubelik Mahler etc etc. However, even Blu-Ray can’t turn sows’ ears, recording-wise, into silk purses so what didn’t sound wonderful in 1969 is not going to sound wonderful in 2019. Some of the Kertesz Dvorak issues fall into that category IMV.
So maybe the universal-player comparison of different media isn't quite without a degree of inescapable confirmation bias....
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Originally posted by jayne lee wilson View PostBut a dedicated redbook player could outdo the Pioneer on CD couldn't it? I bet it could....Like a classic Krell or Marantz say , standalone or especially, playing through a modern, carefully CD-optimised DAC.......
So maybe the universal-player comparison of different media isn't quite without a degree of inescapable confirmation bias....
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If jlw is thinking in terms of jitter, the PS3 was widely recognised as offering around the lowest rates around. Sadly, the only such device in my household is the lower audio functionality PS4. I am somewhat tempted to investigate a reconditioned PS3 at the right price, to feed a decent DAC, however.
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Originally posted by Dave2002 View PostAren’t you making big assumptions? I don’t actually know whether you are right or others would agree about your choice of “classic” CD players when compared with Blu Ray units. It’s possible you are wrong, but you are trying to take a biased view ab initio. I would agree that probably playing a CD directly on a Blu Ray player will probably not give outstanding results, but I would expect that connecting a Blu-ray player to a high quality DAC would give similar results to a very good CD player, or such a CD player connected to a similar DAC.
Mutatis mutandis, the more isolated a given component/source/power supply is from its neighbours, the better its data retrieval (e.g delicate info like timbral detail, individual address of the instrument, or spatial precision i.e imagery) will also tend to be. But as I often say, it is all down to the individual system, the separates (what goes on under the lid e.g. galvanic isolation) and how well they work together. It can seem like something of a black art to optimise a given set-up, but like a famous definition of genius, it is often down to an infinite capacity for taking pains...(read: trial and error...).
Of course feeding the CD data stream into a separate DAC may (often does) give better results, but (unfortunately! )....transports make an audible difference too. As anyone who has compared various Teac, Philips, Sony CD sources, not to mention computers or streamers used as USB Transports, can attest.
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Originally posted by jayne lee wilson View PostBut a dedicated redbook player could outdo the Pioneer on CD couldn't it? I bet it could....Like a classic Krell or Marantz say , standalone or especially, playing through a modern, carefully CD-optimised DAC.......
So maybe the universal-player comparison of different media isn't quite without a degree of inescapable confirmation bias....
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