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Whoever believes jazz and classical are the only 2 legitimate musical artforms have some seriously stunted musical knowledge. Here are a couple suggestions:Coil - Time MachinesPIL - Metal Box1st few Wire albumsBrian Eno's early stuffEarly CanKraftwerkdo I need to keep going?
Quote from: Rob BabcockJazz is America's only true original art form and jazz is very serious music. While I enjoy jazz very much, it is certainly not America's 'only' true art form. While I don't particularly enjoy Bluegrass music (having grown up in Kentucky) it predates Jazz in our country and many would consider it an art form. Then again, some music lovers believe the only 'true' music is classical (and I'm lumping baroque, chamber, etc in with that) and that there has not been any music with 'value' since the 1800s. Personally, I don't limit myself in that regard, enjoying a wide range of styles and artists. Variety is the spice of life, no?Just my .02 cents...Happy Listening, Dave
Jazz is America's only true original art form and jazz is very serious music.
Hmmm...you must be a Redcoat?
DVD-Audio will never be dead. SACD instead will be gone soon.
If what you're saying is true, that Sony only released one domestic SACD title in the last year, that just seems like more evidence SACD is dead. Sony was the inventor and promoter of SACD -- they should be huge supporters of the format -- if even Sony isn't releasing titles on SACD at any kind of reasonable rate, it's obvious the format is toast.
The inventor of a format doesn't necessarily does the most promotion for it....witness Pioneer's involvement with LaserDisc. Where was Philips?
Despite the lack of involvement from Sony, at least on the software side, there were over 1,000 SACD releases within the last 12 months.
Where'd that NAD pic come from, soundboy? I can't find a thing about it on Google.Unfortunately there's no non-technical, non-audiophile reason that can be given as to why DVD-A or SACD is a cool new thing to the non-nerd listener. It's kind of an insurmountable marketing challenge IMO. It's just not as big of a jump as it was from vinyl to CD. In a way the slogan of "perfect sound forever" is true because in order to realize the extra resolution offered by the new formats you have to do all the aud ...