Originally posted by PHS
View Post
Turntables for vinyl
Collapse
X
-
Originally posted by cloughie View PostDoes anyone remember the useful tool for setting up hifi systems aka an EMI LP SEOM6 John Borwick’s Enjoyment of Stereo? And getting your speakers not only L and R the correct way round but also ‘in phase’.
I have heard some very good LP playback kit, but one of my friends who had such kit decided he'd had enough, and put almost all of his LPs in the bin. They were in very good condition, but he'd obviously decided that CDs and digital were better, and also noticed that nobody was really that interested in his LPs.
Times move on, and there's probably no point in hanging on to older things which just aren't as good as some of the latest kit and techniques. Another - slightly different example. I recently spent hours trying to make high quality panorama photos, but yesterday I noticed that mobile phones can do this now. A quick test suggested that a modern phone can do a better panorama than a fairly expensive camera, and many minutes of computer time stitching separate photos together. Even a better camera doesn't significantly (if at all) improve over the phone cameras on this task. I shall keep my more expensive cameras for the moment as for some tasks they are better than phones, but for panoramas I'd suggest that the phones win.
Comment
-
-
Originally posted by richardfinegold View PostSorry to put a pin in the balloon, but your lp was in all probability made from a digital master, as most lps of that vintage were digitalized...
As you point out, the expectation bias is significant, along with the enjoyment of artifact, such as the sound of the needle drop... If you and other vinylstas enjoy that, please continue to do so.
Holt (interviewer): So virtually no consumers are hearing anything like the sound of your master tapes.
Johnson: Oh no, they aren't. This is a major problem with all record reproduction.
Holt: In that respect, then, digital can do a better job, as a conveyance between the master tape and the average consumer.
Johnson: Not necessarily. Maybe average consumers, but not on a good audiophile system.
Holt: You mean on a helluva good audiophile system.
Johnson: A very good one. What we lose in the digital copy is very interesting. The inner detail is gone, and when things get complex, like in the Symphonie Fantastique, even though the string section is subdued and distant, in the master you can pick out a number of the individual violins that are playing in there. It is not a "massed string sound" like you hear in commercial recordings. But once you've gone through the digital process you start losing the discrete-instrument sense, particularly in complex sustained-sound programs...
Also bear in mind that my palpable enjoyment of vinyl reproduction at home continues alongside mostly enjoyable CD, SACD, DVD, Blu-ray and digital download sound reproduction, though, as HighlandDougie pointed out, ‘where’s the joy - or romance - in a FLAC file?’
Comment
-
-
Originally posted by Keraulophone View PostThank you, I will. You’re right about the digital mastering of most vinyl reissues, though some are expensive analogue-path AAA ‘audiophile’ releases for the really dedicated gramophonist (‘Mastered using Pure Analogue Components Only from the Master Tapes through to the Cutting Head’ - snvinyl.co.uk), like some of those Reference Recordings made by ‘Prof’ Keith Johnson. He explains some of his thoughts on analogue and digital recording in their interview for Stereophile magazine: https://www.stereophile.com/content/...nce-recordings Here’s an excerpt:
Holt (interviewer): So virtually no consumers are hearing anything like the sound of your master tapes.
Johnson: Oh no, they aren't. This is a major problem with all record reproduction.
Holt: In that respect, then, digital can do a better job, as a conveyance between the master tape and the average consumer.
Johnson: Not necessarily. Maybe average consumers, but not on a good audiophile system.
Holt: You mean on a helluva good audiophile system.
Johnson: A very good one. What we lose in the digital copy is very interesting. The inner detail is gone, and when things get complex, like in the Symphonie Fantastique, even though the string section is subdued and distant, in the master you can pick out a number of the individual violins that are playing in there. It is not a "massed string sound" like you hear in commercial recordings. But once you've gone through the digital process you start losing the discrete-instrument sense, particularly in complex sustained-sound programs...
Also bear in mind that my palpable enjoyment of vinyl reproduction at home continues alongside mostly enjoyable CD, SACD, DVD, Blu-ray and digital download sound reproduction, though, as HighlandDougie pointed out, ‘where’s the joy - or romance - in a FLAC file?’I will not be pushed, filed, stamped, indexed, briefed, debriefed or numbered. My life is my own.
I am not a number, I am a free man.
Comment
-
-
Originally posted by Keraulophone View PostThank you, I will. You’re right about the digital mastering of most vinyl reissues, though some are expensive analogue-path AAA ‘audiophile’ releases for the really dedicated gramophonist (‘Mastered using Pure Analogue Components Only from the Master Tapes through to the Cutting Head’ - snvinyl.co.uk), like some of those Reference Recordings made by ‘Prof’ Keith Johnson. He explains some of his thoughts on analogue and digital recording in their interview for Stereophile magazine: https://www.stereophile.com/content/...nce-recordings Here’s an excerpt:
Holt (interviewer): So virtually no consumers are hearing anything like the sound of your master tapes.
Johnson: Oh no, they aren't. This is a major problem with all record reproduction.
Holt: In that respect, then, digital can do a better job, as a conveyance between the master tape and the average consumer.
Johnson: Not necessarily. Maybe average consumers, but not on a good audiophile system.
Holt: You mean on a helluva good audiophile system.
Johnson: A very good one. What we lose in the digital copy is very interesting. The inner detail is gone, and when things get complex, like in the Symphonie Fantastique, even though the string section is subdued and distant, in the master you can pick out a number of the individual violins that are playing in there. It is not a "massed string sound" like you hear in commercial recordings. But once you've gone through the digital process you start losing the discrete-instrument sense, particularly in complex sustained-sound programs...
Also bear in mind that my palpable enjoyment of vinyl reproduction at home continues alongside mostly enjoyable CD, SACD, DVD, Blu-ray and digital download sound reproduction, though, as HighlandDougie pointed out, ‘where’s the joy - or romance - in a FLAC file?’
Comment
-
-
Originally posted by Richard Barrett View PostI've never for one moment regretted the replacement of vinyl by digital audio reproduction. I've never released anything on vinyl and have no interest in doing so.
Comment
-
-
Originally posted by Bryn View PostThe final Johnson quote strikes me as utter pseudo-scientific BS. It is not being in the digital domain that muddies the water but editorial decisions.
Comment
-
-
Originally posted by PHS View PostAbsolutely! My only justification for buying a turntable would be to play Lps that haven't made it to cd.
I sold off the analog rig at a profit, thanks to the popularity of vinyl, same for the lps
It absolutely makes sense if you have lots of stored lps and you wish to play them to be getting an analog system. If you have no physical media and are starting from scratch, then I shake my head
Comment
-
-
Originally posted by Eine Alpensinfonie View PostMe too. I think I spent more time listening out for surface clicks, static and mistracking than I did about the music.
Vinyl. Relax? Besides everything Alpie mentioned, which could drive you to distraction when you know the exact place that loud pop or mis-track will occur, there is the whole vinyl ritual of cleaning the lp, spraying some anti static device and waiting for it to dry, hoping that an entire side (20 minutes of continuous music can be played! Woo Hoo!) will pass with dust clinging to the stylus, and in the case of a vinylista like Fremer perhaps a dozen more rituals before music actually emerges; I guess some people find the whole ritual a form of relaxation, just like some people enjoy a trip to the Dentist without novacaine.
It is possible to achieve great sound from vinyl. Like Dave’s friend, I think most of us here agree it isn’t worth the hassle.
Regarding T.S. point, yes vinyl sales are up, perhaps putting some dosh in the hands of the musicians compared with streaming, all well and good. Most of the young uns buy them for extra musical reasons, like cover art. My nephew had bought a few classic rock lps for $30 each and was chagrined when he learned he couldn’t play them on his CD player. Most of these people keep a few albums to tack on the wall but use streaming as their music sourceLast edited by richardfinegold; 14-03-21, 13:24.
Comment
-
-
As someone who listens to both vinyl and digital I do think people are exaggerating the perceived failings of vinyl. Try taking a listen to one of the Blue Note Tone Poet series on a decent system to hear what the medium is capable of.
For whatever reason I -do- prefer listening to LPs rather than digital - though I listen to more digital than vinyl as it’s more convenient.
To quote someone else, mastering trumps format when it comes to the quality of replay.
For the record I have no problem with anyone who prefers digital, it’s an individual choice.Steve
Comment
-
Comment