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Richer and fuller, yes. More dynamic, how do you figure? Dynamic range is measurable.CDs are capable of 90dB dynamic range, maybe more. Vinyl comes nowhere near that.
I found it amusing that somebody living in "western Colorado" would say it's a shame somebody has to live in Wyoming. Thanks, but overall, I love it here, despite the lack of a public cultural life. We do what we can to compensate for that. Blaming Clear Channel doesn't explain what happened to NPR which, eight or nine years ago, made a conscious decision to drastically cut its classical music broadcasting. That led to Wyoming Public Radio to eliminate all of its classical programing save for "classics today," which actually may be gone now too. Instead, they began to play music I can't even categorize, a bland sort of combination of folk rock, country, straight rock, a little (very little) jazz late Sunday nights. All in a pathetic attempt to be "popular." Whatever, it is hugely mind numbing stuff, not worth giving it five minutes of listening time. It may reach its nadir every week on a program called "The Ranch Breakfast Show," on Saturday mornings, and, yes, it's as awful as its title indicates.
I have quite a few damn good sounding cd's as well.@ Lazydays ...I have the 2009 Legacy edition of Kind of Blue, and it sounds real, breathtaking.
A rant:I just got into vinyl a couple months ago at the age of 33. The more I listen to records, the more peeved I become that my generation was deprived of them.
People are 100% correct when they say vinyl is richer, fuller, and more dynamic than digital
Nobody had vinyl when I was a teenager in the 90's.
I liked it too, till I found out about what took plce in the recording studio. Now I know why the six eye mono is the best one of the bunch. The best version I've heard so far is the Classic 45 rpm version, and sooner or later will buy the mono version.gary
Sony's multi-million-dollar push of their new patented format was a big factor.
Interesting, the original issues had the pitch slightly slow on side 1, due to a tape machine being off. This wasn't corrected until a remaster in 1992. I thought I read that the Classic versions were corrected?Pitch not withstanding, you object to the original stereo recording? This was not electrically remixed for stereo, but many people prefer mono versions of some stereo recordings like those from Blue Note. I find the stereo Blue Notes fun to listen to and over analyzing the recording gets in the way of my enjoyment. The ones that sound weird to me are the mono recordings remixed for stereo.
Could the author be refering to emotional dynamics?
True, but not really in practice. Many CDs are so dynamically flawed trying to get them "louder" with the net effect being they "turn up" the quiet parts destroying dynamic contrasts. While the medium is capable of it, the product produced for it many times cant. That said, not ALL recording outfits employ this, but it is a growing concern in the industry.Whoops, I may have mis tagged this one, it was directed at the comment about the "superior" dynamic range of CDs....Russellc
Ah, the "loudness wars".It looks like this practice may be falling out of favor.
One can only hope, but there's no good evidence that is happening yet