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Bingo, bingo, binglo and bingo - you rolled my entire belief up better than I ever have As a wade more into classical, no CD player makes the cut. Piano and string instruments simply don't sound right...tho CD for Rock and roll is a great device (AC/DC's 'Back in Black' is so much more guttural than on even pristine vinyl).Again, great summary, Jeff Quote from: TONEPUB on 10 Mar 2007, 05:13 pmI've chased down this rabbit hole pretty far and thereis some overlap. I have heard some digital players thatI have enjoyed quite a lot at various price points, but usually analog still comes out on top in terms of air, dimensionality and capturing the ultimate tonalityof music.However, it does depend on what kind of music you listento. If you are a big classical lover, you may never findthe ultimate nirvana with a CD player.Also, it may depend on how picky you are as well. I dothis every day for a living and by the nature of the jobhave had to become fussier than I would if I were justdoing it for fun.Last but not least, it's a lot easier to get analog WRONG(setup, etc) so in that sense good CD is more enjoyableand certainly a lot easier than bad analog.
I've chased down this rabbit hole pretty far and thereis some overlap. I have heard some digital players thatI have enjoyed quite a lot at various price points, but usually analog still comes out on top in terms of air, dimensionality and capturing the ultimate tonalityof music.However, it does depend on what kind of music you listento. If you are a big classical lover, you may never findthe ultimate nirvana with a CD player.Also, it may depend on how picky you are as well. I dothis every day for a living and by the nature of the jobhave had to become fussier than I would if I were justdoing it for fun.Last but not least, it's a lot easier to get analog WRONG(setup, etc) so in that sense good CD is more enjoyableand certainly a lot easier than bad analog.
This is a audio apples vs. oranges question. Years ago a friend gave me an old Thorens TT (I'd owned a much nicer Thorens base, English arm, a good cart before CD, probably worth $2000 today) with a cheap cart. I don't know what this old Thoren's is worth, but any new $30 disc player would stomp it in a variety of ways. I don't know how cheap you can go with a new or used TT and still get something folks might agree on as being "audiophile quality" (maybe $500 new?), but a new Oppo universal player with respectable quality can be delivered to your door for $150. Take care to check to see how bouncy your floors are too. Last time I got the old Thorens out it was to expose my kids to vinyl and we had to tiptoe on 50 year old wooden floors to avoid skips.
TCG - so let me get this straight - you think vinyl is better and that CDs don't make music? I'm not really sure what you're getting at, please clarify your thought here, again.Sheesh.
Gary/lazydays really nailed it for me...it's the highs/treble that are most objectionable on CD. I have never heard convincing reproduction of triangles, cymbols, flutes, piano or small string instruments (violin, viola) with CD - on any system or at any price. For me, at least, it handles clarinets about as well as vinyl (maybe just a little less well).I find CD's are fine for rock and roll - played loudly, the dynamic range is really appreciated. But ask it to perform any nuanced music - ie., well miked jazz or classical - and it falls flat. No amount of attention lavished on the playback side (digital to audio conversion) can correct the inherent issues in the recording itself (that is, the technology itself). This commentary would be inclusive of the amazingly talented Frank van Alstine who likely just needs to upgrade his vinyl front end to see how far he really is from offering real musicality with his DAC's Get a deck that keeps unwavering speed and doesn't get all irregular due to stylus drag, vacuum clean your records, isolate the heck out of it from mechanical and acoustical feedback, set the arm geometry up right (and use a damping trough for most moving magnets and irons) and get a good tracking cartridge with something other than a cheap bonded/bushed stylus tip - and you'll trounce CD rather regularly and easily for accurate music reproduction. Please note - I'm not anti-digital...I'm pro-musicality. I hate the efforts it takes to make phono playback great; but I'm a slave to the music, not form. I think DVD-A is a healthy advance on CD technology, for instance.Alfred Hitchcock had a plot device in most or all of his movies called a 'MacGuffin'. It was a story line that went nowhere - drawing you from the real story line. The 'MacGuffin' in audio is CD......it's fine on it's own merits (convenience, dynamics mostly), but it draws you from the real story line (the music). Right now/today, music is best re-created by the old record player. I am really hoping that is not the case in few years, but it is today
Most of the musicians I know wouldn't know good audio reproduction if it hit 'em on the head. YMMV.
Cheapest Music Hall Turntable from several years ago ($300) aproximately equals original Rega Planet CDP($800). So the equation is: digital costs 2 2/3 times as much as equivalent analog.
So far, my favorite CD players have been pretty spendy,but good enough that if I couldn't have analog anymoreI'd be a happy camper!
Hey Chairguy, I appreciate your comments but they are a bit obsolete. The problem is that you have not heard the current shipping AVA hybrid preamps and DAC or tube preamp.In my home system, I am getting pretty amazing playback with both vinyl and CD. The only significant differences that give away the record playback are the occasional ticks and pops. Other than that, both sources are completely musical.Note that I have been playing with getting better record playback for 40 years and have tried all the good stuff; air bearing straight line turntable, Linn setup, wildly expensive tone arms and moving coil cartridges, super critical alignment tools, strange record mats, record clamps, and more. I know all about proper cartridge alignment and have spent hours getting it spot on. It would have been difficult for me to design the Longhorn cartridge without a really revealing record playing setup. Don't assume my playback setup is lacking, and of course I have heard the very best and most expensive record playback systems too (not impressed).If you had a current T8 preamp and Ultra DAC you would go crazy deciding which you liked best, vinyl or CD.Of course vinyl wins because there are so many great recordings that never made it to CD. Of course CD wins because you don't have to stop and turn the dumb thing over to hear the complete performance. Regards,Frank Van Alstine