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As for digital sounding like vinyl, I'm afraid we are all out of luck there. Nothing sounds like vinyl. You get (sort of) close but digital doesn't seem to have the same 'natural' presentation. Much of that has to do with the state of recording studio production.
Yep. The tube stage does add dimension and the player is excellent, don't get me wrong. It's an outstanding player and I'd take it over any other player I've heard. I could see how some people would prefer it and of course it's all system-dependent. A system needing more life and sparkle could benefit hugely by such a player.But in what I would consider to be "analog" properties, it's really not close to either the Red Wine Audio Monica-2 or the dAck! 2.0 that I have in-house. The Monica doesn't ha ...
Just add some compression, roll off the low end, add some distortion in the treble range, add some crosstalk and some phase distortion - CD becomes just like vinyl!
No it's a lot more than that. Digital can actually beat vinyl when it comes to smoothness with low jitter devices like the Squeezebox. However as soon as I think digital is the best I listen to some well recorded vinyl and it just totally blows me away. Like Scott said, there's a certain naturalness with vinyl that just doesn't compare. For example horns, the skin of drums and cymbals sound real when well recorded and played back with vinyl. I can't say the same about even the best digital playb ...
.."sliced and diced and then reassembled".That is the very reason that digital will never sound as natural as analog. WEEZ
Just add some compression, roll off the low end, add some distortion in the treble range, add some crosstalk and some phase distortion - CD becomes just like vinyl! Pops and ticks on records appear mostly as mono signals, so it should be possible to extract that, add some white for hiss, and mix the result into the CD output.Just adding a bunch of phase distortion is probably enough to give digital that "open sound" that vinyl is supposed to have.
You mention a "bigger, more direct sound." I submit that's phase distortion.
I'm not claiming that CD means "perfect sound forever," like they originally touted, but they sure beat the two tin cans and a piece of string approach of vinyl.