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28-09-2013, 06:45 PM | #61 | ||
Oo\===/oO
Join Date: Jan 2007
Location: Tamworth
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I lucked it at Coffs Harbour markets :-)
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28-09-2013, 07:58 PM | #62 | ||
FF.Com.Au Hardcore
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Location: Southern Highlands
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I was at a clearing sale, and there was 3 boxes with records in them I checked the boxes quickly and saw one or two elvis ones, but they sold for like $70 ish, I wish I bought it as there were lots of elvis ones when the guy was going through them, I was on a budget at the auction as well I would have loved them. They are quite heavy as well when your talking like 300 records.
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29-09-2013, 11:09 AM | #63 | ||
FF.Com.Au Hardcore
Join Date: Jul 2010
Location: Bunbury WA
Posts: 1,409
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Let Madaya have a say. I know a teeny bit about sound reproduction. I've built several amplifiers, from 1 watters per channel to 200+ per channel. I've built loudspeakers, from shoe box size, to 6 foot tall horns. I've employed regular drivers (i.e. speakers) and some expensive European drivers.
For digital zero, that is to say, the sound comes from out of no where, CD's rule. The CD's dynamic range, from zero to 100+dB cannot be mirrored by the old stylus and groove. But spare a thought for vinyl. How come it is as good as it is? It blows me away, that in comparisons with old material that has supposedly been remastered (and I have a few old vinyls with their CD counterpart), I still tend to favour the vinyl, it has, more presence. Once the music starts, who can hear the hiss, besides, hiss was a part of the stage performance many moons ago, we where just too happy to notice.
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29-09-2013, 01:00 PM | #64 | ||
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The problem with re-mastering is probably just down to source tape i'd imagine, a mixture of converting analogue tape to digital audio, unmixed down master tape v's tape mastered for the vinyl and the condition of the old tapes in the first place.
Take Led Zeppelin though for a great example of a CD remaster done right...Jimmy Page himself was appalled at the first CD issues of the catalogue, so he went right back to the raw studio master tapes, and done a proper remaster direct to digital. And he has done it for a second time, new remasters to take advantage of MP3... Of course, not every band has this control, Zeppelin were lucky that they actually owned their recordings. A lot of other bands from that era didn't actually own the tapes, and the record companies just flogged off poor sounding, hastily done CD reissues...
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29-09-2013, 01:08 PM | #65 | ||
lid man
Join Date: Aug 2010
Location: melbourne
Posts: 709
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i have hoarded a collection of Vinyl First pressings . I have berlin philharmonic, early pavrotti
opera classics. if any one interested let me know?? |
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29-09-2013, 01:56 PM | #66 | |||
RIP...
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Posts: 15,524
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Whilst a few bands may have the control and desire to produce a better quality sound for the end user, most of them wouldn't know good sound if they fell over it. Having outstanding musical talent and knowing quality of sound are two very different things, and in fact rarely go hand in hand. Being in the audio industry, I know a few musicians, and I swear you'd think they're tone deaf when it comes to listening to quality audio. Throw them a musical instrument and they make it sing like no one else can... Whilst I have my preference in regard to CD VS vinyl, the cold hard reality is that the production of either format is generally the weakest link and lets both mediums down.
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29-09-2013, 02:33 PM | #67 | ||
I am Groot
Join Date: Dec 2007
Location: Burnett Heads, Qld
Posts: 6,840
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If your ever chasing reissue Led Zeppelin vinyl keep these guys in mind, I've replaced a few of mine, not because the originals where stuffed, but because I can't stop playing them and don't want to ware them out.....
The best part about these (NOT THE PRICE!) is the sound quality is out of this world, much better than the original, I couldn't believe the improvement when I first played my "new" Led Zeppelin IV...... Best reissues I've found, if you can take the price hit....(they also deal in pre-owned)...... http://store.acousticsounds.com/inde...x=7&search.y=6
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29-09-2013, 08:40 PM | #68 | |||
FF.Com.Au Hardcore
Join Date: Sep 2008
Posts: 1,112
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This is very true. After all, we're talking about two different passions/interests. The people who invest in high end audio gear, and have extensive knowledge in it, are rarely musicians. Their passion is the gear, the quality of the sound, what is possible in sound reproduction. Same as the guys who put huge audio systems in their car, go to shows and put it in competitions etc. They aren't about the music. The music they play is chosen to stretch the legs of their system, to get the most out of their equipment. Musicians on the other hand... most of them dont have any money to buy anything half decent. They're more interested in the creation of art. A few generalisations there obviously... |
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01-10-2013, 10:15 AM | #69 | ||
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Location: Cattai, Sydney
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The Newtown Festival is on very soon with heaps of markets for clothes, music etc - if anyone is looking for something i'd reccommend heading down to the markets. There's bound to be records on sale. Great bands on at this one too. Definitely seeing Gay Paris and Snowdroppers (for probably over the 20th time now) - so much blues rock goodness
http://www.newtowncentre.org/festival/
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01-10-2013, 11:19 AM | #70 | ||
lid man
Join Date: Aug 2010
Location: melbourne
Posts: 709
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good vinyl gives a spacial effect digital doesnt. Best are recorded in analog . I have classical only and also have CD etc but can beat the vinyal for effect. (mind you the decl cost $4500.(and thats cheap!!!) trev
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01-10-2013, 08:02 PM | #71 | |||
FF.Com.Au Hardcore
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Where can I find these good quality turntables ? Any I have come across have been low end ! |
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01-10-2013, 09:16 PM | #72 | |||
RIP...
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Send me a PM if you want any info.
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01-10-2013, 11:56 PM | #73 | ||
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A vinyl analogue recording will easily surpass the frequency response of a compact disc which has a defined and absolute frequency at which it cuts off.
The harmonics generated by the sub and supersonic range from a good mechanical stylus create the "fullness" that "purists" talk about....and is consistent with an actual live acoustic experience. As for the Digital to analogue converters, well when I studied engineering we learnt that no matter how close you made the steps in a staircase you could never make as smooth a ramp as a perfect sine wave out of square waves. Every time I played my Elton John album with the 30khz 4 channel pilot signal I wondered to myself how a CD would process that supersonic signal if I recorded my vinyl to CD. Well the answer is it doesn't decode 4 ch on the burnt CD... Neither did the Deep Purple Machine Head album in 4 channel mix.... Or the Pink Floyd dark side of the moon..... . Last edited by zilo; 02-10-2013 at 12:20 AM. |
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02-10-2013, 12:02 AM | #74 | ||
Regular Member
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Location: Heidelberg Melbourne
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I've still got my three crates worth of vinyl. I doubt I'll ever be able to part with it. Got Sabbath, Rainbow, and Zeppelin. Pity I never got into some of the older Australian bands a little more back then like Coloured Balls, Chain, and Carson Boogie. They'd be cool vinyl to have.
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02-10-2013, 12:15 AM | #75 | |||
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Got "towards the blues" by chain in a box somewhere too. yes...I copied to inferior CD so as not to wear them out...LOL |
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02-10-2013, 08:26 AM | #76 | ||||||
RIP...
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CD has a theoretical maximum upper FR of 22.05kHz. Vinyl has a theoretical maximum upper FR of ~40kHz. The difference between the 2 is that all CD players can reach their upper limit easily and ruler flat with ultra low distortion. Even very cheap CD players. Most vinyl systems can barely reach much above 20kHz, and those that can are rapidly falling. The distortion at those high frequencies is also very high. Reality is, only the very best turntable rigs (above $15,000) will maybe reach 30kHz, and even then the distortion is very high. We need to consider how much musical information is at these frequencies. The short answer is, bugger all. The pressing also has a lot to do with how much high frequency information is on the disk. Lastly, how high does our hearing typically go, that can be a little over 20kHz in young people, however as we age our hearing steadily declines. My own hearing is very well looked after and it's good to 16kHz. I've tested many people older and some have an upper limit of as little as 8kHz. Quote:
This is nothing more than distortion. Some people like, some don't. If we compare it to the master tape, its not there. Quote:
If you did a spectral analysis as to how much musical content exists above 10kHz, you'd know how redundant your statement is. Quote:
But who cares, the 4 channel mixes from old vinyl is complete garbage anyhow, as is all modern multi channel audio mix.
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02-10-2013, 08:28 AM | #77 | ||
RIP...
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Yet the inferior CD is capable of making an exact duplicate of that vinyl.
Ironic isn't it...
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02-10-2013, 05:20 PM | #78 | ||||||||||||
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You must be mid to low twenty something? Quote:
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Hardly an improvement. Quote:
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I hope you understand that point. Last edited by zilo; 02-10-2013 at 05:36 PM. |
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02-10-2013, 05:35 PM | #79 | ||
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Sox, just so that you understand a bit more about 4 channel vinyl have a read of this, it's from Wiki but describes the 30khz carrier that most medium quality turntables were able to get from vinyl...
CD-4 (Compatible Discrete 4) / Quadradisc Compatible Discrete 4 (CD-4) logo Quadradisc logo An RCA Quadradisc recording. The color fringes around the reflections are caused by the ultrasonic signal that contains the difference information used to separate the four channels. Compatible Discrete 4 (CD-4) or Quadradisc (not to be confused with compact disc) was introduced in May 1972 as a discrete quadraphonic system created by JVC and RCA. Record companies who adopted this format include Arista, Atlantic, Capricorn, Elektra, Fantasy, JVC, Nonesuch, A & M, Reprise and Warner. This was the only fully discrete quadraphonic phonograph record system to gain major industry acceptance. In the CD-4 system, the quadraphonic audio was divided into left and right channels, which were recorded orthogonally in the vertical plane of the disc groove, which is the case with normal stereo. The audio frequencies (20 Hz to 15 kHz), often referred to as the sum channel, would contain the sum of the left front plus left back signals in the left channel and the sum of the right front plus the right back signals in the right channel. In other words, when observing the audio frequencies only, the record appeared to have an ordinary stereo recording. Along with this audio, a separate 30 kHz carrier was recorded on each groove wall. The carrier on each side carried the difference signal for that side. This was the information that enabled a combined signal to be resolved into two separate signals. For the left carrier it would be left front minus left back, and for the right carrier it would be the right front minus the right back. These audio signals were modulated onto the carriers using a special FM-PM-SSBFM (frequency modulation-phase modulation-single sideband frequency modulation) technique. This created an extended carrier frequency range from 18 kHz to 45 kHz for the left and right channels. The algebraic addition and subtraction of the sum and difference signals would then yield compatible and discrete quadraphonic playback. CD-4 was responsible for major improvements in phonograph technology including better compliance, lower distortion levels, pick-up cartridges with a significantly higher frequency range, and new record compounds such as Q-540, which were highly anti-static. A typical CD-4 system would have a turntable with a CD-4 cartridge, a CD-4 demodulator, a discrete four-channel amplifier, and (ideally) four full-range loudspeakers. Some manufactures built the CD-4 demodulator into complete four-channel receivers. Simply put, CD-4 consists of four recorded signals (LF, LB, RB, RF) and the following coding matrix, similar to FM broadcast stereo multiplexing. The CD-4 encoding/decoding matrix:
The CD-4 record track is broader than a conventional stereo track, so maximum the playing time is lower than a conventional stereo record |
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02-10-2013, 05:59 PM | #80 | ||||
Oo\===/oO
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Location: Tamworth
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Most studios have good playback equipment (obviously) and there are musicians that can afford the high ends stuff... But this doesn't effect what they hear...going back to this point. Quote:
The whole connection between what their guitar tone is at the amp, then how it is produced on the medium are one in all. Most albums are mixed down so that the sound can come though 2 speakers and still sound decent, and in a studio situation, there is the constant challenge of ego's combating each other...the guitar player wants his guitar this loud...drummer wants this etc... To summarise, its not that they don't care about quality audio, they care about how their sound is reproduced, and if it sounds good on a xxx-system they are happy.
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02-10-2013, 06:08 PM | #81 | ||||||||||
RIP...
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Look up the FR of instruments. The vast majority of humans do not hear above ~20kHz. Fact. Quote:
Though it has absolutely nothing to do with vinyl's supposed superior HF response. Quote:
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Your words were - The harmonics generated by the sub and supersonic range from a good mechanical stylus create the "fullness" that "purists" talk about....and is consistent with an actual live acoustic experience. This is complete and utter nonsense. Any harmonics generated by any source is a form of distortion. Fact. It is not consistent with a live acoustic performance at all. Not even close. A good source will not add anything to the recording. Quote:
Have you done a spectral analysis of various types of music? I have, many times. Quote:
Multi channel music however, is dreadful. Always has been. Quote:
However you mentioned the CD copy with no reference to 4 channel vinyl in that post. And in that case, you have an exact audible copy.
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02-10-2013, 06:33 PM | #82 | ||||||||
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It's obvious to everyone reading this thread that I can easily make even you hear 20khz if I crank up the gain. Quote:
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Irrelevant observation in my opinion. Quote:
To use your words...nonsense. Quote:
let me highlight it... "Every time I played my Elton John album with the 30khz 4 channel pilot signal I wondered to myself how a CD would process that supersonic signal if I recorded my vinyl to CD." |
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02-10-2013, 06:47 PM | #83 | ||
FF.Com.Au Hardcore
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alright ......who left the door open to the geeks holding pen!!!!!!
gonna take all bloody night to round them back up again.
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02-10-2013, 06:58 PM | #84 | |||||||||
RIP...
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You tell me how relevant a persons hearing is at 20kHz, 20dB (or more) below reference? Quote:
Run your vinyl through a decent 16/44 AD converter. Get back to me with the results. Quote:
I said any harmonics generated by any source (meaning playback source, CD, vinyl, etc) is a form of distortion. That is a fact. Quote:
You asked if I was serious about the musical content above 10kHz. I am serious, and can prove it with spectral analysis. If you can't prove otherwise, then why bring it up? Quote:
It's scientifically not necessary. Stereo can capture and reproduce everything required for a realistic high fidelity illusion of music. Quote:
I replied to this statement of yours. I have Lobby and the coloured balls, including "heavy metal kid" on vinyl. Got "towards the blues" by chain in a box somewhere too. yes...I copied to inferior CD so as not to wear them out...LOL You made no reference to multi channel here...
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02-10-2013, 08:02 PM | #85 | ||
Former BTIKD
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I don't really give a toss if it's hertz or hurts. It's giving the rest of us a headache.
Closed.
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