R
Richard Monroe
Well-known member
I would also add that a 7 course goumet banquet is not always better than Mom's home cooking.-Richie
billisa said:Mr. Sear can talk about harmonics, and accurately too, but most people listening in the old days didn't have nearly the gear to hear disks played back at anywhere close to what the master tapes would've sounded like. CD's, and other things, made very high fidelity much more accessible to the masses -- and I say that's a great thing.
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Good point. I resisted the switch to cds at first. (more due to not wanting to change formats than being an audio purist) But when I eventually jumped on the cd bandwagon, one of the first things I noticed was little details that I had never been able to hear on vinyl or cassette. --Both good AND bad details. It seems like the noise floor of cassettes was more forgiving, and sort of glued everything together. On the other hand, if it's digital it's all unforgivingly laid bare. So consider this: Maybe to record good digital, you've got to be really good?
I finally have a viable excuse!omtayslick said:...So consider this: Maybe to record good digital, you've got to be really good?