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I've found that the early cd's from ECM are not to bad ie. Pat Metheny or John Abercrombie
Makes sense to me to invest in a contemporary quality player. Read and ask.
LOL Jim
my father was a recording engineer @RCA/Chicago in the early 70s. we would bring home vinyl cut from the master lathe the had at the studios. i also got to listen to some of the original Tascam master tapes. the audio quality was really quite stunning. of course, this is comparing it to the stereotypical cradenza audio system we had at home. i believe it was all relative. home audio at the time was all crap, or at least what our friends and family had. what i listened to at the studio was a revelation, and that is why i am an audiophile today.i have some of this same music on CDs today. it has been difficult to build a system that makes them enjoyable sonically. they still sound like compressed crap compared to todays nicer recordings, but they sound good enough to where i dont cringle and feel like someone is taking a cheese grater to my brain. what this has done for me is open my eyes to vast collections of music i would never had tried, strictly for the sonic enjoyment. i scour forums like this for new artists and recommendations.
Medium Jim: If someone replied to one of your posts like that, you'd either spend the rest of the thread cryin' about it or you'd be PM-ing the mod and JohnR. I seem to recall you lecturing a fellow mod/volunteer not that long ago about how posts like that were a poor example for the rest of us. Try walking the walk.D.D.
I had read in Audio magizine back when CD first came out that the early produced CD were copied directly from masters that were equalized for LP. So, it makes sense that some of the early CDs would sound muddled. Also, jitter was a lot higher back then.
I serious doubt the validity of this claim. The RIAA pre-emphasis EQ is quite extreme. A CD produced with such an EQ curve would sound beyond atrocious - with anemic bass and treble so loud that it would be unlistenable. I have lots of early CDs - they are fine. In fact, some are outstanding. Since DSOTM was mentioned, I'll comment that the initial Japanese 'pressing' I have is exemplary.The first generation players left something to be desired, but I still have my Philips CD100 and it still works (I don't use it though - haven't for almost 30 years).