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mute79
..:culture vulture:..
Registered: Feb 2001
Location: in transit
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| quote: | Originally posted by Trypsin
Turntables have been around for what, 100 years? Although the storage has changed from wax to vinyl, the technology is exactly the same. To say that CDs will be phased out in 5 years is pure conjecture. And as for the DVD example... ever notice how DVD players are reverse compatible with regular audio cds and VCD/SVCD? There are so many audio cds out there currently, and making a digital reader reverse compatible is easier than making an analogue one, that I think we'll see CDDA support for a while. |
yea, i agree, somewhat though... remember about 5-6 years, those big huge 12" laserdiscs that were supposed to revolutionize the movie industry by moving away from VHS? yea, it died 6 months later even though millions bought into it... although the digital encription will be around for a while, the cd size will not... i really doubt that cd's the way they are now will be around in 5-10 years... there's bound to come out some new thing thats gonna hold more data and require less space.... like flash cards nowadays... better than cd's cuz they're rewriteable and easily carried around...
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Jul-12-2002 14:18
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Scottaculous
habitual line crosser

Registered: Mar 2001
Location: On a plane
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My biggest gripe with vinyl: When I spendd $10 on a vinyl, I want that vinyl to last forever or provide me means to make it last forever. I've started buying 2 or 3 of the same vinyl just so I can delay that. On top of which, if you keep your vinyls in perfect condition, sound quality starts to degrade after 100 uses. I'm not sure on that number because I read it else where but the point is, it's a limited number.
Scientifically ang logically, there is no reason why a vinyl would sound better than it would on a CD. People claim vinyls have a rounder sound because it's analog, but they forget to mention that a track is producted digitally (in the dance world at least), placed onto a cdr (the same ones you and I use), and then given to the vinyl pressers to work their magic. CDs win in the category of longevity, portability, and scalablity.
I don't know anyone who spins 1 track 1 cd. I cram as much as I can into 1.
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Jul-12-2002 21:22
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Scottaculous
habitual line crosser

Registered: Mar 2001
Location: On a plane
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Since we are discussing the vinyl and CD medium in respect to dance music, I confined my reasons to only that.
Electronica is produced digitally. Which means, the original signal is digital. Whatever limitation of that digital recording is then sent to a mechanical device that cuts the vinyl and represents that digital signal into an analog signal. If that digital signal is a 44.1kHz (standard, although there are much higher sampling rates can be created) then the analog representation is recreated from a 44.1 signal.
A record playing system (recording from an analog source) has the potential to reproduce frequencies well above the CD's upper limit. However, in actual practice LP reproduction is limited by many other factors, including the quality of vinyl, stylus compliance, and the condition of the record. Even on the outer grooves, a dust partticle or groove deformation only 0.025 millimeter in diameter will cause the same loss of high-frequently resolution as that designed into the CD standard. On the inner grooves, the dust particle need be only 0.011 mm in diameter to produce the same loss.
No one can argue with the statement that the original recording is the best recording. In the recording industry, the original recordings are the master tapes. From the master tapes, all the vinyls and CDs are created. Now in the electronica world, if the original recording (digital) was produced at 24bit 96kHz and copies onto CD and vinyl, theoratically CD and vinyl would sound the same. Now let's look back at paragraph #2, the upkeep of vinyl is expensive and those dust particles will more than likely get into your vinyl degrading your sound quality. Vinyl has more distortions than CDs because of that. Those cracks and pops found in vinyl are non-existent in CDs. See my point?
Vinyl may sound better recorded from an analog source, but when it's being recorded from a digital source it loses.
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Jul-12-2002 23:16
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Tony Morello
The Renegade Master

Registered: Apr 2001
Location: Calgary, Alberta, Canada
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| quote: | Originally posted by Scottaculous
Since we are discussing the vinyl and CD medium in respect to dance music, I confined my reasons to only that.
Electronica is produced digitally. Which means, the original signal is digital. Whatever limitation of that digital recording is then sent to a mechanical device that cuts the vinyl and represents that digital signal into an analog signal. If that digital signal is a 44.1kHz (standard, although there are much higher sampling rates can be created) then the analog representation is recreated from a 44.1 signal.
A record playing system (recording from an analog source) has the potential to reproduce frequencies well above the CD's upper limit. However, in actual practice LP reproduction is limited by many other factors, including the quality of vinyl, stylus compliance, and the condition of the record. Even on the outer grooves, a dust partticle or groove deformation only 0.025 millimeter in diameter will cause the same loss of high-frequently resolution as that designed into the CD standard. On the inner grooves, the dust particle need be only 0.011 mm in diameter to produce the same loss.
No one can argue with the statement that the original recording is the best recording. In the recording industry, the original recordings are the master tapes. From the master tapes, all the vinyls and CDs are created. Now in the electronica world, if the original recording (digital) was produced at 24bit 96kHz and copies onto CD and vinyl, theoratically CD and vinyl would sound the same. Now let's look back at paragraph #2, the upkeep of vinyl is expensive and those dust particles will more than likely get into your vinyl degrading your sound quality. Vinyl has more distortions than CDs because of that. Those cracks and pops found in vinyl are non-existent in CDs. See my point?
Vinyl may sound better recorded from an analog source, but when it's being recorded from a digital source it loses. |
/me applauds
i still fell that vinyl is better but you are true to an extent and the way you put forth your opinion wins my respect
what we need here is a producer's opinion...
anyone going to step up to the plate?
i'll get in contact with my radio producion instructor and see what he thinks of this 
___________________
Tony Morello Dot Com
Soundcloud
Facebook
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The Drunken Monkey Podcast
The Mixdown Podcast presented by Tony Morello
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Jul-12-2002 23:47
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