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If it was the master done for CD release, then I would think there is little chance of any improvement with just the added pleasure of some surface noice [sic] .
The point is, they only have one master and if it is done on a digital format, which most of them are, then the poor cutting engineer has to do some knob twiddling.
Digital by itself is not pure evil to me
...it is digital done wrong by abuse of compression and limiting that has ruined much of the music I used to enjoy.
How does the mastering process actually work? I thought there was first a studio master of the final desired mix. Then, that is sent down the line for eventual release in which different engineers manipulate the studio master to build a product to actually sell. Is that pretty close?
The nature of a stylus vibrating in a asymmetrical groove presents some real interesting scenarios, especially a low frequency tone, at high volume on one channel, and nothing else in the other channel.Well, I'll get over it, but is disturbing.