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Yep.More bits and a higher sample rate are good for an initial recording, mixing, processing, etc... but normalizing that down to 16/44.1 is just fine!
Today's moral? Buy more CDs, put them on your iPod and computer if you like, and enjoy them. Get a great DAC if you've got computer stuff to enjoy, but don't waste your time futzing with computer equipment and music software when you can just buy CDs and enjoy the music itself instead of fiddling with stereo gear. God help us that some people waste time fiddling on their computers just to get music; half the reason the general public loves the CD over LP is simple convenience and never having to align a cartridge, flip an album or clean records or worry about wearing them out
Huh? The downfall of making any money from professionally produced medium really tanked when the CD burner came out!At that point, one could make a perfect digital clone of any CD.Previous to that, the best one could do was to make an analog tape recording of an LP.Why do you think the RIAA ruined DAT recorders for the US market?On the brighter side, the transition has awakened some musicians to the idea that money is to be made in live performance and as a result, there is more music being made that is actually PERFORMED, as apposed to PROGRAMMED.James.
....With a CD burner, you have to have the source CD....
I remember reading about some of the early pop/rock reissues made from the LP master ( a tape that is EQed specifically for pressing a record), but I don't know how often that happened.I am listening to Jean Sibeleus Symphony Nr. 6 Opus 104 on the BIS label right now. It was recorded in 1983 on the Sony PCM-F1 and the CD itself was produced in 1984. It is a damn fine sounding recording and it makes me wonder why we don't just refine the technology base we already have rather than keep trying to reinvent the wheel and introduce more variables into the mix. /quote]I totally agree.
I've found that the early cd's from ECM are not to bad ie. Pat Metheny or John Abercrombie
"Bright Size Life" deserves recognition as the great album that it undoubtedly is; with each passing year its place at the forefront of jazz becomes more defined, its universality more than ever clearly revealed.