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Bellhead, There was lots of music that was wonderfully produced in the 70's. Unfortunately there was probably more music that wasn't, mostly rock music (lot's of midrangy albums with distorted guitars). If it was produced good, you'll hear it in the SP Tech speakers. If produced badly, you'll hear that too, but it's not going to send you out of the room. Once you differentiate which of your recordings sound great or mediocre, listen to the great ones on the SP Techs and then buy yourself a pair of Advents, put on your bell bottoms, and smoke a doob. Then play that old copy of Sticky Fingers and relive one of the finer moments of the 70's!
So whether it is music or home theater or both, you just cannot argue with physics. Just remember that the engineers who created those old recordings made them as good as they could given the technology of the time. Will they sound as good as a recording made today on something like SACD, most certainly not. Will they sound like rubbish, certainly not.
You may be interested in knowing that SACD (or DSD, as it is known at the recording end of things) is considered to be roughly as good as the best analog recording devices (1/2" or 1" half track at 15 or 30 ips) by some engineers, and not quite as good as that by others. It is also popularly thought that the equivalent level of quality in the PCM domain is reached not until at least 24/96 or 24/192. The point I am making is that there is still argument as to the superiority of any of the digital formats to the best of analog of 30 years ago as to the storage format. When it comes to convenience - no contest, digital wins. As to long term data integrity, digital has a poor record compared to tape (except for the 3M binder formulation fiasco which led to early disintegration of some tapes from the 60s and 70s).Then, as now, the biggest and most significant variable is the skill of the recording, mixing and mastering engineers.
While a pristine copy of a tape may equal SACD, in this day and age I am sure they are mastering at a higher rate than 24/96 in digital format. The resultant files never degrade and can be stored forever preserving the original recording. So I see nothing but good in the move to digital.
Quote from: phoenix_rising on 23 Jun 2008, 10:51 pmWhile a pristine copy of a tape may equal SACD, in this day and age I am sure they are mastering at a higher rate than 24/96 in digital format. The resultant files never degrade and can be stored forever preserving the original recording. So I see nothing but good in the move to digital.right - "perfect sound forever" Did you work for Philips at one time, Phoenix? Not many engineers share your sunny optimism! Digital masters don't exactly degrade - more like self destruct. I honestly don't expect there will be as many of today's digital masters around in a hundred years as there will be analog. For all its flaws, the vinyl disc is a very robust archival medium. Many of my 10 - 15 year old digital masters are marginally playable, some not playable at all.
Hi Phoenix,Maybe you would be a good source of the answer to this question. If you had a very important digital master recording, in what specific format and under what physical conditions would you store it to ensure maximum data integrity in 100 years, with compatibility with then-existing playback devices in mind. Data conversion from one format to another during this period would not be allowed - the idea is to choose a scheme that allows putting away on a shelf for 100 years.As I said, vinyl analog, for all its flaws, would seem to pass this test fairly well.My inquiry is innocent - I am not attempting to embarrass you.I also realize we are getting off topic!