Hi Doug: That lil' ol' comment o'mine was worded inelegantly and seems to be getting misinterpreted - I was looking to the future in terms of what fills the vacuum when the industry abandons the CD format. It's currently fashionable to knock CD's and many have at it on various Circles but what comes after and will these folks still want to dance on Redbook's grave when the only widely available format for download could well be some sonic trainwreck like mp3 ? The mass market has already gotten accustomed to the lo-rez sound so I think its a real possibility that audiophiles are going to be ( more ? ) ghettoized.
The irony of considering yourself and your multi-$$$ stereo system as being ghettoized is not lost on me but I really feel some trepidation about where this all could end up...Even more so when industry insiders like James Tanner are feeling pessimistic as well.
D.D.
hey d/d, i understand, really. it seems more likely than not that the next "standard" is gonna be ewen worse than cd. only point i was making, is that "the beginning of the end" of quality being the #1 goal of the major recording studios was redbook back in 1983.
while it bothers me on many lewels, the fact is that, for me personally, if not a single recording is ever made again - in
ANY format - it will not impact me too badly. i am already blessed with a couple thousand lps, a couple hundred cd's, and decent non-commercial fm radio. there's a plethora of music i could purchase that's already been recorded. as i am 55 years old, there's enough music already out there to keep me happy as a pig-n-poop.
but, for the industry in general, it is not gonna be saved from those at the top. it is clear that the "big music moguls" could give a rat's a$$ about the quality of the music - format
OR content. the article written by mr archer is more proof of that. only when the rug is pulled out from under them, so to speak, by musicians side-stepping them, and making their own records, will content
and format improve. imo of course.

doug s.