T
Tim Gillett
Banned
That is why records from the late 70's and before are the best sounding!
VP
Of course, as you have said many times in the past, VP...
Tim
That is why records from the late 70's and before are the best sounding!
VP
No ... no it's not. Come on people ... stop perpetrating this stupid battle. There were plenty of awesome-sounding albums in the 80s and onward.
I think it would be an issue because it'll be out of phase in every place it's played. But!! It will never be out of phase the way it was in your studio, so everyone who plays your recording will get a totally different playback experience than you did in a way that would really, really suck for you.
Or maybe I'm thinking too much? Heh. It's worth thinking about because it does affect how people will hear your music.
Having never been personally involved with disc cutting, though I read a fair bit about it over the years, I learned today from lonewhitefly that it was fairly common to have a digital delay stage in the audio chain since the late 70's.
I knew about the need for a delay of some kind. The older method achieved the delay by using a special playback head which read the audio slightly ahead of the proper playback head. This gave the lathe time to widen the groove spacing for the loud passage coming up, or to narrow the groove spacing when the music went quiet. It resulted in fitting more grooves per inch, and therefore longer playing time per side than would otherwise be possible. Neat trick.
As I understand him, lonewhitefly says that from the late 70's it was common to replace the special head with a digital delay.
Wow, think about that. All those 100% analog only vinyl records put out from the late 70's onward which were all analog...werent all analog at all. They went through an analog-to-digital audio stage, and then a digital-to-analog audio stage. Wow, just wow.
And does that shed a possible light on why the OP all of a sudden stopped posting here, right after someone suggested that the adding of a digital stage in the disc cutting signal chain wouldnt change the analog sound at all, and which we have now been told has been in operation in disc cutting for the past 30 years anyway? That someone was me. And I didnt even know until today that a digital audio stage was common in disc cutting from as far back as the late 70's. So now, even more than when I made my initial comment, I stand by what I said. Thankyou lonewhitefly for the extra information.
The picture from Steve Hoffman shows the older system which was totally analog, by virtue of its special extra playback head, and which apparently SH still uses for a 100% analog disc cutting system .
Maybe the OP needs to find an ME like Steve Hoffman with that older pre digital system.
And maybe some of you "true believer" guys need a reality check. What you thought was 100% analog vinyl was at some point 100% digital, and you didnt even know it. "bummer" indeed...
Tim G
Don't go there bro. I can tell the difference; this is just one reason which is why '50s-early '70s pressings sound better than late '70s and on pressinngs. The other reasons being the use of 24-track tape and the quality of vinyl suffering. I can typically tell when a vinyl record was pressed with digital in the chain or not, just by listening. I have a pressing of Belle & Sebastian's "Fold Your Hands Child ..." LP which I am certain is all-analog just by listening (I have never researched to find out if it's true -- I don't need to). Also, the 4 Men with Beards' LP reissue of 'Starsailor' by Tim Buckley is most certainly a digital transfer -- the original 1970 pressing sounds much better.
Good info. Thanks for this.
If you can tell this just by listening, then you indeed do have some golden ears. But --- and I mean no disrespect by saying this at all --- if you can't tell 100% of the time without error, then doesn't it kind of negate the argument that digital sounds like crap? I mean, if digital is so harsh sounding, and the artifacts are so obvious, then someone should be able to tell 100% of the time in a blind test. Right?
P.S. In case you haven't read my earlier posts, I prefer analog myself. But I've tried a blind test on myself to see if I could tell the difference between an analog recording and a digital copy of one, and I couldn't. So I gave up the "analog sounds awesome, digital sounds like crap" torch. I just record to analog because I like to.
Try recording just cymbals and have a listen.
VP
If you can tell this just by listening, then you indeed do have some golden ears. But --- and I mean no disrespect by saying this at all --- if you can't tell 100% of the time without error, then doesn't it kind of negate the argument that digital sounds like crap? I mean, if digital is so harsh sounding, and the artifacts are so obvious, then someone should be able to tell 100% of the time in a blind test. Right?
P.S. In case you haven't read my earlier posts, I prefer analog myself. But I've tried a blind test on myself to see if I could tell the difference between an analog recording and a digital copy of one, and I couldn't. So I gave up the "analog sounds awesome, digital sounds like crap" torch. I just record to analog because I like to.
I don't have golden ears, I don't have a crazy fancy system, and I cannot tell 100% of the time. But there are some records I gravitate toward playing more often for some subtle reason I can't put my finger on (re: sound quality, not content). I think I mentioned this earlier, but I don't listen to music to 'test' my hearing or some other bull$hit. I just gravitate toward what sounds best and I've generally found the more analog the thing is, the more I gravitate toward it. This was something that I did way before I even knew there was a difference. I wouldn't rely on any kind of double-blind test to come to any musical conclusions.
I don't think digital sounds 'harsh' or 'like crap' in general. I think digital is fine but it doesn't resonate with me in the recording process. CDs are okay for playback but I like vinyl better -- mainly for the experience. My main beef with digital is that I think it's ruined music, but this is not really a sound quality issue.
Ok, I guess I'll try it. Should it be a really obvious difference or a subtle one?
I agree with everything you said here --- especially the bold parts. However, I don't know what you mean by this:
"I wouldn't rely on any kind of double-blind test to come to any musical conclusions."
I've mentioned this before, but I would not be too quick to put much value in a simple double-blind test. The differences are subtle and may not be readily apparent. In my opinion, it's not so much what you hear but what is felt. And pinpointing when you have that 'feeling' and when you don't is something difficult to do consciously.
I also agree there may be some sonic differences. I notice it mostly in the top end of things like hi-hats. I'm not sure I would call it 'harsh', but maybe a 'plastic' type quality. There also seems to be some kind of subtle sonic 'sheen' applied over everything after it's transferred to digital. In my mind, I seem to hear it as something weird in the highs that wasn't present before ... as if the digital is adding something there.
that said, people hear what they want to hear and believe want they want to believe. is there really a difference? probably. can we prove it for sure? probably not.
You and I have already had this conversation in this exact thread. I'll quote myself from earlier in this thread:
That's all I'm going to say on the digital vs. analog thing. This thread has been derailed enough. I was just trying to help add my experience and knowledge with vinyl pressing. Whether digital vs. analog makes a difference or not is not relevant to this discussion -- we are operating with the assumption that it does; we have already made this decision.
"That is why records from the late 70's and before are the best sounding!
VP"
No ... no it's not. Come on people ... stop perpetrating this stupid battle. There were plenty of awesome-sounding albums in the 80s and onward.
tim said:The picture from Steve Hoffman shows the older system which was totally analog, by virtue of its special extra playback head, and which apparently SH still uses for a 100% analog disc cutting system .
Maybe the OP needs to find an ME like Steve Hoffman with that older pre digital system.
And maybe some of you "true believer" guys need a reality check. What you thought was 100% analog vinyl was at some point 100% digital, and you didnt even know it. "bummer" indeed...
Sounds good to me.
By the way, I dig the MHvsRP stuff. Too bad I'm only hearing a digital representation of it though.![]()
Who cares if the records "sound" great from the 70s - the music was crap!
(Kidding, kidding.... I grew up on 80s hardcore punk and used to hate that 70s stuff but I really like a lot of it now)