false, false, false, you cant take low resolution
digital recordings (CD) and DO ANYTHING TO THEM to
make them sound even remotely as good as proper
high end vinyl mastering and playback. there is no magic
trick to restore resolution lost in the low res
digital recording/playback processes. If there was
a magic black box like that, CD wouldn't have
been replace by higher bit rate digital processes
like 24/96 or SACD etc.

--
J.C. O'Connell (mailto:[email protected])
Join the CD PLAYER & DISC Discussions :
http://tech.groups.yahoo.com/group/cdplayers/
http://launch.groups.yahoo.com/group/cdsound/ 


-----Original Message-----
From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of
Rob Studdert
Sent: Tuesday, November 17, 2009 6:41 PM
To: Pentax-Discuss Mail List
Subject: Re: OT: Vinyl vs. Digital


2009/11/18 John Sessoms <[email protected]>:

> That was what I was saying about early CD issues being just a straight

> analog to digital conversion of the tape masters. The tapes were 
> originally mixed so they'd sound good on vinyl, but the reproduction 
> characteristics of the CD are different.

The RIAA equalization is not applied to the master recording so eq is
not a problem, the master recordings being tape however do degrade with
time. The ferrous binders often fail or become sticky so the the tape
flutters, the remnant magnetism becomes diminished so the noise floor
rises and dynamics become a little compressed. Plus old tapes often
suffer "print-through" which is an echo effect created due to tape
layers imposing their magnetic record on each other. It's absolutely no
surprise that old tapes sound worse years after they were recorded.

> If you wanted to, you could add those same kind of "warm" vinyl 
> inaccuracies to digital recordings so they'd be present in playback.

That's true, the same as adding film noise to a digital photograph. The
state of the art digital recording systems are so accurate a new
generation of microphones had to be developed in order to take limited
advantage of the new capabilities.

-- 
Rob Studdert (Digital  Image Studio)
Tel: +61-418-166-870 UTC +10 Hours
Gmail, eBay, Skype, Twitter, Facebook, Picasa: distudio

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