Vinyl is digital. Get over it!

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  • Опубліковано 21 лис 2024

КОМЕНТАРІ • 2,9 тис.

  • @vwestlife
    @vwestlife  Рік тому +219

    Here's the full "Made In Japan" song if you want to hear it in all of its 1983 digitally mixed and mastered glory: ua-cam.com/video/MajjFCF_oAE/v-deo.html

    • @alfredklek
      @alfredklek Рік тому +13

      Cool song, your musical taste is part of why I like your channel :)

    • @BilisNegra
      @BilisNegra Рік тому +5

      @@alfredklek Same here.

    • @Nickword1
      @Nickword1 Рік тому +2

      I have a question for you? Do different Cd-R brands sound different from each other when burning music on them? im buying some old single CD-r's that come in a single jewel case on ebay that were released in the 90s and early 2000s to test them out but i wish you would try this. I was told that some actually do sound better from another like the Fuji Cd-r's from Japan. it's a big subject really with the whole different colors of dye the cd's recording surface use to use back then from today and how the technology has changed. can you make a youtube video on this? Thanks

    • @leduyquang753
      @leduyquang753 Рік тому +11

      @@Nickword1 That makes little sense. The audio data on CDs is stored digitally and losslessly, so if the same recording is pressed/burned on two different CDs, they are going to sound identical. The "dye color" is totally irrelevant.

    • @moe47988
      @moe47988 Рік тому +3

      The appeal of vinyl is the tone that it transplants onto the music, which is affected by things such as the typeof needle, but I'm sure you think that it's all snake oil. Also, there's a lot of vinyl that was made directly from analog tape masters, so it's a bit disingenuous for you to claim that all vinyl is digital.

  • @1RungAtATime
    @1RungAtATime Рік тому +5061

    “Audiophiles don’t use their equipment to listen to your music. Audiophiles use your music to listen to their equipment.” - Alan Parsons

    • @davidg4288
      @davidg4288 Рік тому +229

      That's a great quote from Alan Parsons. Actually anything produced by Alan Parsons *would* be worthy of testing your audio equipment!

    • @Daijyobanai
      @Daijyobanai Рік тому +43

      Aha!
      That was ‘Big Yellow Taxi’ by Joni Mitchell, a song in which Joni complains they ‘Paved paradise to put up a parking lot’, a measure which actually would have alleviated traffic congestion on the outskirts of paradise, something which Joni singularly fails to point out, perhaps because it doesn’t quite fit in with her blinkered view of the world. Nevertheless, nice song.

    • @davidspendlove5900
      @davidspendlove5900 Рік тому +21

      Yes that’s true , it’s something you can lose sight of as you upgrade equipment.

    • @vuzkoth
      @vuzkoth Рік тому +54

      @@Daijyobanaihow does a parking lot alleviate traffic congestion?

    • @giannismag3064
      @giannismag3064 Рік тому +48

      That's true only for a small percentage of rich/obsessed audiophiles. Audiophiles in general are the best music listeners, since they love music so much that they are trying to get the most out of it. The "listening to their equipment through music" quote is just a generalization made by anti-audiophile people (usually those who haven't tried the sport, or can't afford it).

  • @mikewifak
    @mikewifak Рік тому +1277

    As a self-diagnosed idiot, I like vinyl cuz the pretty pictures are bigger, and it goes around and around.

    • @scatteredfrog
      @scatteredfrog Рік тому +86

      Honestly, that "goes around and around" is one of the reasons I love listening to records. I mean don't get me wrong, I still buy CDs, but I love records, partly because they're really also a visual medium. You can watch the label revolve. Can't do that on a CD unless you have some kind of see-through CD player, and even in that case, CDs spin at, what? 1500rpm or something?? Not conducive to watching. :)

    • @scatteredfrog
      @scatteredfrog Рік тому +5

      @@mal2ksc I have a bunch of 50th-anniversary archival sets that do come like that -- The Doors' recent reissues, Déjà Vu, etc.

    • @halfsourlizard9319
      @halfsourlizard9319 Рік тому +75

      Those are 100% legit reasons to love vinyl.

    • @kaitlyn__L
      @kaitlyn__L Рік тому +47

      This reminds me of Dankpods saying "you know what? It doesn't sound as good as digital. But you know, it's a whole ritual to get it going, and you get to watch it spin"

    • @DrNachtschatten
      @DrNachtschatten Рік тому +6

      speeeeeen

  • @garfythecat
    @garfythecat Рік тому +796

    Nothing beats a well mastered/produced album regardless of the format it's played back on.

    • @halfsourlizard9319
      @halfsourlizard9319 Рік тому +72

      This tbh ... I love the older vinyl-style mastering ... but it's totally possible to do exactly the same in FLAC.

    • @Unfunny_Username_389
      @Unfunny_Username_389 Рік тому +25

      Nothing beats a great song regardless of how well it's mastered/produced.

    • @adam872
      @adam872 Рік тому +5

      All of these comments are true

    • @KatesDirtySister
      @KatesDirtySister Рік тому +6

      ​@@Unfunny_Username_389but on the other hand you can certainly ruin my enjoyment of great music by exceptionally shit mastering. Looking at you Death Magnetic or Gold & Grey

    • @wile123456
      @wile123456 Рік тому +1

      Science also shows human really can't recieve fidelity beyond 16 bit and 44khz, so if you get 24 bit music then you're already at the pinnacle of human hearing.
      Your equipment and what you use to listen to it matters far more.

  • @DruNature
    @DruNature Рік тому +877

    As soon as I showed my dad spotify about 10 years ago he gave me his entire record collection citing he would never grab a record again after being able to just click the track so quickly and easily. I now have an insane collection of 70s records!

    • @billkeithchannel
      @billkeithchannel Рік тому +50

      I turned my cassette radio recording mix tapes from the 80's into UA-cam playlists. Every so often I would have to hear a song to make sure I am linking the correct version to what I had recorded back in the day. Waiting for a cassette to fast forward or rewind to search for that song was so annoying and I forgot how inconvenient it was.

    • @jackol_8
      @jackol_8 Рік тому +54

      Yeah! I can understand. I showed my dad the IVF technology and he said "If i knew about this earlier, I would never have slept with your mom".

    • @santiagovillavicencio8073
      @santiagovillavicencio8073 Рік тому +4

      Hahahah you have a great dad lol

    • @stevejones69420
      @stevejones69420 Рік тому +27

      An unrelated question where do you live and do you perhaps have some form of home security.

    • @bcj842
      @bcj842 Рік тому +9

      His loss 😂 I love Spotify but you don't wanna replace a great record collection with it.

  • @ghrs_music
    @ghrs_music Рік тому +52

    I recently added a turntable to my office as an alternative to streaming music while I work and it’s been such a great change for me, but it’s nothing to do with audio quality and everything to do with the act of selecting an album and letting it play through rather than constantly jumping from thing to thing on a streaming service. There’s something satisfying about limiting my choices. I own hundreds of records, but now I keep a rotating selection of about 20 LPs in my office to choose from, and I find that so much more satisfying than being faced with the debilitating infinite possibilities of a streaming platform. I love streaming music, but the feeling of choosing a record from a shelf and putting it on your turntable is hard to beat.

    • @massimo790
      @massimo790 Рік тому +2

      I’ve recorded my Vinyl tracks on a Reel to Reel tape recorder.
      You still have the same warmth and Dynamic.
      Is also beautiful to see this giant wheel rotating and look at the needles of the Vu Meters moving.

    • @davidclemmett9797
      @davidclemmett9797 11 місяців тому

      @@phillipbanes5484that’s not the point. Most the time people are streaming they’re doing it on their phone! So it’s not just about intimate choices and not knowing what to play, it’s an utter distraction because then people’s short attention spans are dealing with social media and emails and everything else that comes with having a phone. The only time I ever stream is when I’m driving and even then I’m constantly asking Siri the play the next song on shuffle! I never keep still in the moment unless I’m spinning records

    • @simoneadaminutrition
      @simoneadaminutrition 10 місяців тому +2

      ​@@phillipbanes5484 Limiting yourself, or pretending to be limited is not the same as Being limited for real.

    • @TheCollectorCave
      @TheCollectorCave 5 місяців тому +1

      This x 1000. Thank you for this. I was about to make a near duplicate comment!
      I've loved the fact that playing records has made me slow down and listen to an album in its entirety. I'm appreciating the music way more than I had been since streaming became mainstream.

  • @paulbunyangonewild7596
    @paulbunyangonewild7596 Рік тому +316

    I think the biggest reason why this older music sounds so much "clearer" than modern music, clearly isn't because it was analog, but really it's because this older music wasn't so busy, it had room to breathe, with some sections being totally quiet for a second at a time, with less music backing

    • @almendraman
      @almendraman Рік тому +35

      That is true. Take the classic "Pet Sounds" album by the Beach Boys, with a radically ambitious sound for its time with immense arrangements and lush arrangements. In its original, analog-recorded, analog-mixed and mastered, Mono form: It sounds so low fidelity! Brian Wilson absolutely overestimated the technology of the time. There's a reason the sound of the music being made back then was usually kept simple. Once it was remixed in Stereo in the 90s, the difference is outstanding. It now sounds so pristine and modern. Truly ahead of his time.

    • @inthefade
      @inthefade Рік тому +39

      And because dynamic compression wasn't so over-used.

    • @spawel1
      @spawel1 Рік тому +19

      @@inthefade ppl out here putting 19 compressors on every track

    • @colbyboucher6391
      @colbyboucher6391 Рік тому +7

      Yep, yhe early CD era gave rise to this myth because production sucked for a while.

    • @mmmmmmmmmmm10
      @mmmmmmmmmmm10 Рік тому +1

      ​@@almendramanok Patrick bates

  • @williampamblanco
    @williampamblanco Рік тому +584

    I once got to see a mentor preparing an indie release for vinyl, and his words were exactly "If people only knew all the stuff we have to take out for this!" While cutting out bass and highs because of vinyl's limitations. It's mostly in the mastering. [Edit] couldn't have said it better than the ending!

    • @hotwax9376
      @hotwax9376 Рік тому +80

      You're pretty much right. Vinyl DOES usually have superior fidelity and dynamic range to digital (at least from my experience), but that's mostly because it's mastered better (especially old vinyl), not because of any inherent technical advantage vinyl has over digital -- because it has none.

    • @MysteryMii
      @MysteryMii Рік тому +62

      Yeah. I keep seeing people say that vinyl is more dynamic than digital, but that’s simply not true in terms of format itself. You can’t go too dynamic with vinyl or else the needle would keep popping out of the groove (not to mention the limitations of the format itself). There’s going to have to be some compression and some EQing needed for even the most dynamic of vinyl masters.

    • @dvdtech
      @dvdtech Рік тому +9

      He could master the songs on the quieter side and keep the bass/highs the way he wanted. The problem is that nowadays everyone wants to hear louder songs, and drc on digital media is less perceptible than on vinyl

    • @hotwax9376
      @hotwax9376 Рік тому +31

      @@MysteryMii Ironically, it's the technical limitations of vinyl that make it sound better in practice. You can't use loudness war hypercompression on vinyl like you can on digital. And many digital file formats (like MP3) require compression for size anyway, which means that vinyl is objectively better sound quality than those.

    • @maxmustardman298
      @maxmustardman298 Рік тому +1

      if they had to cut low end in this case I feel theres still plenty when listening to most if not all other vinyl pressings

  • @cdl0
    @cdl0 Рік тому +575

    This is an outstanding video by VWestlife. I remember going to a fancy-pants classical music shop in the early 1980s, not long after CDs started to be available, and being truly shocked upon hearing a CD recording for the first time in my life. It sounded so real, like the musicians were in the shop. Now, forty years later, it made such an impression on me that I still remember this like it was yesterday.

    • @NONAMEACCESSIBLE
      @NONAMEACCESSIBLE Рік тому +32

      As much as I consider audiophiles clowns and this has nothing to do with it, but I hate the clean and separated sound of modern classical recordings compared to the warm melasses that are the old (pre 1980s) recordings. Doesn't have much to do with analog or digital as it has with general improvements made in recording and it may have a lot to do with me listening to a lot of old American big band pop music as a kid. The modern recordings just sound really bright and in your face as opposed to the quaint and restrained old stuff. Of course I have to imagine if you lived in a time where only the latter was availeble, hearing the hi-fi versions must have been pretty mindblowing and refreshing.

    • @cdl0
      @cdl0 Рік тому +32

      @@NONAMEACCESSIBLE The passage of time means people have either forgotten (if sufficiently old) or do not know (if too young) about the poor quality of analogue media, in the sense of manufacturing and materials. Often you would buy a very expensive record or cassette tape, only to find the recording marred by scratches, crackles, rumble, hiss, and woolly sound, simply because it was badly made, then end up returning the thing to the shop. They were also physically fragile, as were the devices. CDs solved all of that; it is rare to get a faulty one. Of course, if you wanted a more mellow sound, then you could always downgrade the quality by adjusting the equalization, etc. on your reproduction device, but I think most people were happy that they could finally hear clear recordings.

    • @Mikexception
      @Mikexception Рік тому +6

      @@cdl0 Digital is digital in basic sense because playing is else "1" - means full quality music or "0" - means total silence when some digits are missed. Zero - one is perfect digital.
      Analog has all the span of qualities from best to crap but it in most cases may be corrected by cleaning and aligning which requires effort. Quality in old analog hangs on posesing the ideal speaker amplifier set It alowes to mantain perfect quality without hearing high level of noise Digital is noiseless and for that reason it is so easy to manatin high tones by upbeating them without noise trauma.

    • @GEMSofGOD_com
      @GEMSofGOD_com Рік тому +3

      Too real for the 80s. Not as real now, real now weighs more than 2 gb per album. That sounds really real.

    • @judenihal
      @judenihal Рік тому +2

      with mp3s ipods and streaming, imagine that now you're now going to get the same experience as a CD, with terrible artifacts. you probably listened to it on a very good stereo system

  • @Blarnix
    @Blarnix Рік тому +197

    I had one of my dad’s friends tell me that “vinyl is so much better than digital, digital sucks!”, so I asked her why. She had no idea and assumed they made the record in the booth. It’s a great show of the positive experience bias and placebo effect.

    • @fireaza
      @fireaza Рік тому +17

      Well, they used to, sorta. Back in the early days, the recording would be directly etched into the record. They literally had to re-perform the song in order to make another copy. Of course, this was a LONG time ago, back in the phonograph cylinder days, long before vinyl LPs.

    • @LazyJesse
      @LazyJesse Рік тому +12

      @@fireaza "every copy of X is personalized" strikes again

    • @christianseibold3369
      @christianseibold3369 11 місяців тому +1

      @@LazyJesse Look up Thomas Eddison Cylinders. It's true. They didn't have the technology to copy cylinders yet. They very quickly developed that technology, of course.

    • @deanbalzer993
      @deanbalzer993 11 місяців тому

      Lol. And vinyl still puts CD’s to shame.

    • @tr909love
      @tr909love 11 місяців тому +1

      This video is so missleading and stupid at the same time. LOL people have no clue what they are talking about. Digital is trying to copy analog at it's best by adding and subtracting bits but in the long run it can't replicate the analog and it's impossible. When you groove in a vinyl the vibrations which passed on to the needle that cut the record are automatically transformed into analog as the vibrations and wave form becomes curved as it should be.

  • @darwinsaye
    @darwinsaye Рік тому +209

    When vinyl started to go through its resurgence in popularity, I was constantly telling people who were going on about its analog superiority, that unless they were buying old albums from before the early 80s, it was digital at some stage. I remember when the transition was under way, albums used to be marked with AAA, AAD, ADD or DDD to indicate the methods used at the stages of recording, mixing and mastering.

    • @annaclarafenyo8185
      @annaclarafenyo8185 Рік тому +10

      This is a misleading point, as the in-studio "digital" is at sampling rates which are so incredibly fast that there is no difference between analog and digital. The consumer product, however, doesn't have file-sizes in the gigabytes for each song, it has been reduced in sampling rate the limits of audibility, and at this point, discerning listeners can hear digital effects. You should never say studio digital is "digital", because it's resolution is so high, that it is effectively analog.

    • @synchronuse
      @synchronuse Рік тому

      @@annaclarafenyo8185 most software even professional defaults to 48khz 32 bits per sample, which is as high as you will ever need imo, though 96khz is also widely available, and probably more common. 64 bits though? that is completely unnecessary.
      btw that's 6.144 megabits per second!

    • @alqualonde2998
      @alqualonde2998 Рік тому +21

      @@annaclarafenyo8185 Umm no ? supersampling (higher than needed sampling resolution) is done to make file editing easier and reduce kickback resonances. end product will have what the studio hears as the end product and any lossless format will perfectly recreate that. limits of audibility sampling rate is 44k hz, double the max frequency humans can hear. CD used that. Any difference between what studio hears and what you hear after the file has been mastered is caused by quality of the sound system and acoustics of the room, accepting the file is not corrupted.
      And before anyone asks, you wont get kickback resonances if you listened to a 44k hz sr recording if it was mastered in higher srs.

    • @annaclarafenyo8185
      @annaclarafenyo8185 Рік тому +1

      @@alqualonde2998 The 44Khz is for the average listener, it's a Fourier transform, so even double the maximum frequency leads to audible differences, although it requires a very sensitive ear. I don't personally hear a difference, but I am believe a good listener that claims he or she does hear a difference, because when the final transfer is done to CD, there is a loss in sampling rate and it isn't negligible. The oversampled in-studio sound is perfect, however.

    • @alqualonde2998
      @alqualonde2998 Рік тому

      @@annaclarafenyo8185 22k is the limit of human hearing... and that's for young woman at most.
      If you sample it at double frequency you can perfectly recreate the analog signal that was in studio.
      Not a digital signal, an analog signal that is perfect.
      You can hear the difference between mastering a piece at 44.1k and let's say 96k sample rate. But you can't tell the difference between a playback at 44.1k and 96k.
      You probably can if you are a dog or a cat but not if you're a human.
      Loss in sample rate is such a misnomer. Sample rate determines the amount of data points for a sine wave we have. With increase bits in each sample getting a higher signal to noise ratio in exchange of doubling the data . 44.1k Hz sampling rate with 16 bit sample size playback is superior to all but live listening in an acoustic room analog experience in all objective ways.
      Studios use higher hzs for resonance and editing reasons.
      Anyone who says otherwise is either trying to sell you something or has been sold something by the previous person.
      Real quality of an audio lies in a strong DAC, noise isolation, room acoustics and well built speakers. My hifi system can play a mp3 from an 10 yo CD ( well kept) in a 10 yo CD player better than any analog system I own. I still love my analog systems don't get me wrong. I even own a German made stylus head lol. Probably spent more on analog than digital, mostly because once you get a well built digital system you simply can't get it any better without spending extreme amounts of money.

  • @thanos_x23
    @thanos_x23 Рік тому +527

    I think it's a blessing that we have digital media because unlike analog digital can be replicated perfectly

    • @Andersljungberg
      @Andersljungberg Рік тому +7

      Don't tell Michael Fremer. He is said to be able to listen to a vinyl record if the recording originally comes from a digital master or an analog master tape

    • @Andersljungberg
      @Andersljungberg Рік тому +6

      what do you mean by perfect Does PCM sound like DSD and Does DXD sound like DSD And finally Does any of them sound like unrecorded audio

    • @thanos_x23
      @thanos_x23 Рік тому +65

      @@Andersljungberg What I mean is that when you digitize a peice of media (movies, music etc.) you can copy that data as many times as you want without it getting altered

    • @hotwax9376
      @hotwax9376 Рік тому +4

      What? The very word "analog" is a reference to how it's a perfect (or near perfect) replica of the original sound.

    • @mateusfelipecota
      @mateusfelipecota Рік тому +55

      ​@@hotwax9376no it doesn't. Analog and digital is the way that the signal is stored. VHS for example is an analog signal(NTSC or PAL) and you can't store FULL HD or 4k video on it. VHS has a shit quality and is analog

  • @m13579k
    @m13579k Рік тому +59

    One thing I will say about the connecting to a Bluetooth speaker is that anything connecting to a Bluetooth speaker will more than likely sound worse. The lower-end codecs compress the hell out of the input source and that is more of the problem, not analog/digital.

    • @Nutz0
      @Nutz0 Рік тому +19

      you are right, of course, but the key word is lower-end. i find that the aptx codecs are much better than the standard sbc. to my ears, the worst part of bluetooth speakers is that most of them are tuned for dramatic impact and they quickly become fatiguing.

    • @Solitaire001
      @Solitaire001 Місяць тому

      This is not just an issue with Bluetooth but also listening to music via portable CD players. Many of them have skip prevention (regardless of the name) that prevents the CD from skipping when you are carrying it. A way to do it is to load the music data in electronic memory, and then playing it back from the memory. The issue is that they sometimes apply digital compression when loading the audio music in the electronic memory. Thus, if you are listening to a regular CD you much actually be listening to compressed audio.

  • @FireMunki63
    @FireMunki63 Рік тому +187

    The issue is more a case of remasters with compressed dynamics now whether that be on CD or Vinyl. That's what is ruining the long term listening experience in many cases. The loudness wars still plague us with many recordings being too hot for instant initial gratification.

    • @cosmefulanito5933
      @cosmefulanito5933 Рік тому +1

      Just uncompress the audio and all well be fine.

    • @pokepress
      @pokepress Рік тому +8

      As someone who runs a video game music radio show, I can attest to this. It can be really crazy when you’re including stuff that’s ripped directly from the games with vocal songs from recent releases.

    • @Texan1048
      @Texan1048 Рік тому

      That's literally the sound of digital

    • @gibsonfan159
      @gibsonfan159 Рік тому

      digital can be uncompressed. A lot of artists are redoing they're earlier "remasters" with more dynamic range.@@Texan1048

    • @vinylandcassettegeek
      @vinylandcassettegeek Рік тому +9

      Red Hot Chili Peppers' Californication is an example of the "loudness wars." Great album, but so much compression to the point of distortion especially on early CD releases. At least that's what I've read up on. I can hear it every time I listen to the album. I wonder what the cassette release of the album would sound like.

  • @doryiii
    @doryiii Рік тому +200

    I have experienced the loudness war firsthand. I got a 1991 Japan CD copy of Scorpion's Love at first Sting, and Still Loving You sounded so much better in it than the new 2015 remaster CD I got later. A quick peek at the waveform in audacity showed exactly why; the remaster was dynamically compressed to the point where everything was the same level, which was not how this song was supposed to sound!

    • @DandyAudiophile
      @DandyAudiophile Рік тому +15

      I totally agree with you. Loudness war is the worst thing that could happen to music after MP3 .

    • @vinylmastersgr1036
      @vinylmastersgr1036 Рік тому +5

      Yes, normalizing they made in greek cds I have after 2010 with flat waveform destroys the songs it gives the impression that bass is so hard and closed sound, also from 2013 at least here in Greece all old remastered songs have gain 98-99 that makes distortion , same with greek re-releases of old vinyls.
      Also vinyls from Taylor Swift and Billie Eilish that one friend of mine has, and they are very expensive, sound like a bad mp3, they make much distortion and I can't listen to these vinyls the high frequencies.

    • @Vanity0666
      @Vanity0666 Рік тому +4

      Rust in Peace's re-release vs original too, the re-release is a damn travesty

    • @tressonkaru7410
      @tressonkaru7410 Рік тому

      That can depend. Coolio put out a re-recording of some of his old hits. Still same guy but had a drastically different feel in sound and beats. I think depends when it comes to remastered.

    • @ktk44man
      @ktk44man Рік тому +2

      This is interesting to think about, I tend to hate 80s recordings because they just don't sound well mixed all the time to me and now Im wondering if hearing these songs in different mixes would change my mind of some of them

  • @MisakaMikotoDesu
    @MisakaMikotoDesu Рік тому +280

    Due to human hearing being band limited to 20Hz-20kHz, there are a finite number of sounds that the human ear can hear, digital can perfectly reproduce every one of them.

    • @Honigball
      @Honigball Рік тому +35

      yeah and no. There are basically unlimited frequencies between even 20Hz and 21Hz, since a frequency doesn’t has to be exactly a full Hz. It can also be, for example, something like 20,001003Hz (or 20.001003Hz if your native language is something like english) or 20,9867324Hz. Thats why resolution (bitrate and samplingrate) CAN matter, if your hearing is trained enough or you just know a track good enough. In this regard it is more like „Digital can reproduce a every sound so closely that the human hearing, especially with high-res files, is worse than the audio file“.

    • @MisakaMikotoDesu
      @MisakaMikotoDesu Рік тому +24

      ​@@Honigball You're still going to run into limits both analog (in how small of a difference humans can discern), and digital (sample rate of the audio). I'd be surprised if anyone could tell the difference between 999.999hz and 1000hz. I'm sure there's double-blind listening studies done on this somewhere, but I never looked.

    • @gayusschwulius8490
      @gayusschwulius8490 Рік тому

      ​@@HonigballBut the Nyquist-Shannon-theorem shows that a sampling rate of 2n can reproduce every frequency of 0 - n Hz perfectly.

    • @Jervin-Music
      @Jervin-Music Рік тому

      Firstly, you're both incorrect. Human hearing range DOES Infact reach below 20hz. And so does audio sampling - I am often listening to music below 15 Hz (down to 11) on my custom built headphone, over BLUETOOTH. and there really is no noticable latency.

    • @Jervin-Music
      @Jervin-Music Рік тому

      And before you start the argument about how my speakers cannot possibly reach that low, I'm actually shaking the skin with a very high quality transducer to get that low, and lower.

  • @JonGallon
    @JonGallon Рік тому +89

    13:27 this reminded of a message that was commonly printed in the 1980's CD pressings booklets: "The sound of the original records has been preserved as closely as possible, however, due to its high resolution, the compact disc can reveal limitations of the source tape."
    Marketing aside, this may explain why artists were migrating to digital recording.

    • @HomegrownHydra
      @HomegrownHydra Рік тому +5

      That text is shown at 12:57

    • @ganck1147
      @ganck1147 Рік тому +1

      Funny that the reverse of this disclaimer is true. I have several same albums on cd & LP spanning from 70s to 90s & most (if not all) of the time, i find the LP version to sound far far better than the cd version. What i mean by better is that the LPs sounded WAY more open, transparent & musical. The CD version would always sound muffled, compressed & lacking in dimension & detail. That to me is the definition of better. For some people, being less transparent & open is better. I recall comparing the same album on LP & CD to a friend but he preferred the CD. He told me LP simply sounded brighter & not better. Hahaha. And he owns a hifi system that cost in excess of usd100k.

    • @bfish89ryuhayabusa
      @bfish89ryuhayabusa Рік тому +6

      ​@@ganck1147that is likely a difference in mastering. With digital audio came the desire to have everything louder, so many CDs are super compressed-sounding. That's not a fault of the medium. Master with less compression, the CD will sound better, but you have to turn it up more.

    • @Sunkenballs12
      @Sunkenballs12 Рік тому +3

      @@ganck1147once again, this is a mastering issue. Please watch the video. I have experience working on records, and having them pressed to LP after a quality vinyl master. 9 times out of 10, the width of the master disappears on vinyl, and it becomes a narrow colored version of the proper master. "Width" is mainly a product of extreme top end (15k and up). Sometimes these frequencies are called "air" frequencies. Not only are these frequencies not cut into vinyl, but most people past the age of 45 can barely hear those frequencies.

  • @ryborg123456
    @ryborg123456 Рік тому +184

    I have restored a bunch of Sony PCM F1 recordings from the 1980 that were stored on Beta tapes on the video track. The greatest advantage of these recordings is that even though the tapes have aged, none of the audio quality was lost.

    • @LouisSubearth
      @LouisSubearth Рік тому +21

      I remember the video Technology Connections did on PCM and how they used video tapes to store digital audio.

    • @MrDuncl
      @MrDuncl Рік тому +10

      The PCM F1 allowed compact disc quality at a Prosumer price before CD was even released. I have read that they were popular for Classical recordings where Multi-Tracking typically isn't used and they just wanted to accurately capture the sound someone in the prime position at a concert would hear.

    • @DinisMadeira
      @DinisMadeira Рік тому

      Yep, some people prefer the defects of vinyl audio, but it doesn't sound as much as if you were listening live in the studio.

    • @Broadercasting
      @Broadercasting Рік тому +2

      First time I heard 'proper' digital was the BBC recording of a classical concert using a Sony PCM-F1. Outstanding for the time.

    • @Solitaire001
      @Solitaire001 Місяць тому

      What I've understood, as long as the data can be accurately read none of the audio data will be lost. It doesn't matter the form, it is whether it can be accurately read that is important.

  • @ClayBenTreeceJr.
    @ClayBenTreeceJr. Рік тому +188

    Man my world just got shattered big-time I have an original 1983 original pressing of Michael Jackson's Thriller on CD and it sounds much better then the later digitally remastered special edition version from 2001 and I also have the re-release of the same album on vinyl from 2015 and it sounds pretty much like the CD version from 1983 and it sounds pretty good.

    • @SarcasticTruth77
      @SarcasticTruth77 Рік тому +56

      I've both the CDs, and you're right.
      This album is a great demo of the early state of things. In those early days, CD mastering was almost a direct transfer of the stereo mix. The down side of that is they sounded fairly week, but had good dynamic range. The "digital remaster" was squished like any 90s/early 00s release. Sounds louder, but kick drum and bass seem weaker.
      The vinyl version is a huge part of this album's lore. The first test pressings of the album were terrible. Vinyl has a quality that wasn't mentioned in this video: groove size. The size effects the dynamic range. If you put too much material on a side, the only way to fit it is to make the grooves smaller. Smaller grooves make it harder to avoid the stylus jumping out of the groove, so you need less dynamic range, so roll off low frequencies, squish it with a compressor, etc. This was the problem they had with early pressings of Thriller: no dynamic range. They had to go back and resequence the album. That's how Lady In My Life lost the second verse, and how Thriller lost part of the rap. That, and a few other smaller edits brought the time down enough to back off the compression a bit. The vinyl still sounds way more squished than the CD, but I kinda like it.
      Anyway, most audiophiles are idiots believing in snake oil. Most of what makes their beloved vinyl sound better is the EQ and compression, which makes vinyl sound a bit more like the radio, squished. Pop from the 60s is even worse. Motown stuff was the loudness wars of their day, but people will go on and on about how great those 45s are.

    • @stevethepocket
      @stevethepocket Рік тому +5

      @@SarcasticTruth77 "Motown stuff was the loudness wars of their day" You talking about the wall-of-sound fad?

    • @Echo-Head
      @Echo-Head Рік тому +11

      I recommend checking out the MFSL 2022 SACD release of Thriller, it's easily the best version of the album I've ever heard, even compared to earlier CD releases, and it really retains all the dynamics of the mix.

    • @ChrisStoneinator
      @ChrisStoneinator Рік тому

      @@Echo-Head It's fucking brilliant. I've heard accounts that it's a bit too relaxed and not "danceable". I wholeheartedly disagree, and while I'd like to try the supposedly superior Sony SACD someday, I suspect most of that talk is from people who built flat, boring systems. It's also been criticised as being less faithful to the original sound of the album due to the same differences, but I personally consider that a less positive.

    • @jamesslick4790
      @jamesslick4790 Рік тому +19

      The later one sounds crappy because it's a bad remaster, NOT because it's DIGITAL. Crappy analog remasters of records exist too.

  • @BThings
    @BThings Рік тому +58

    I just think it's wonderful how people have devised so many ways to record, store, and play audio (as well as so many other types of information). The way vinyl records work is amazing to me, but so is the way a CD works, or a cassette tape, or a music player, like an iPod, or now just our smartphones. All of these things have a certain magic to them, and I find that sense of wonder only increases the more I understand how they work.

    • @brenthooton3412
      @brenthooton3412 Рік тому +1

      Guess I'm gonna have to buy the White Album again.

    • @onradioactivewaves
      @onradioactivewaves Рік тому +5

      My favorite classics are the cylindrical records and the old pneumatic paper piano scrolls.

    • @badbeardbill9956
      @badbeardbill9956 Рік тому +6

      Audio is so cool

    • @keithAstansell
      @keithAstansell Рік тому +2

      @@onradioactivewaves I guess those paper piano scrolls are in a way a digital format with the player piano being a very physical D to A converter.

    • @onradioactivewaves
      @onradioactivewaves Рік тому

      @@keithAstansell very true, much like the old punch cards used for time clocks or how the first personal computers were programmed, I would argue that the scrolls were even a bit of a mix of analog and digital, as there was also speed control ( and I don't recall if there was any other controls). Very nostalgic to me, my great grammie would put them on and sing some of the songs.

  • @DanielLopez-up6os
    @DanielLopez-up6os Рік тому +25

    I think why a lot of audiphile say vinyl sounds better is because it's probably the first time theyve invested into good quality speakers, and a good quality amp that isnt fed a heavily cmpressed mp3 from limewire.

    • @TrudyTrew
      @TrudyTrew Місяць тому

      Yeah. Couldn't possibly be that analogue sounds better. Right?

    • @DanielLopez-up6os
      @DanielLopez-up6os Місяць тому +2

      @@TrudyTrew bruh vinyls have been digitally mastered since the late 80s and advertised proudly so. At no point after the microphone was the sound analog.

    • @gh0stcassette
      @gh0stcassette Місяць тому +1

      @@TrudyTrew Correct.

  • @Reed-Publications
    @Reed-Publications Рік тому +124

    I couldn't agree more with the sentiment of this video. Too many audio snobs out there blowing a lot of smoke. Digital is one of the best things to happen to media as a whole.

    • @hovz-zo8lf
      @hovz-zo8lf Рік тому +18

      It seems as though the more you spend on music, the more you feel you have to act like your shit don't stink.

    • @KanawhaCountyWX
      @KanawhaCountyWX Рік тому +12

      Plus, with digital you can make exact duplicates of master recordings for redundancy, in case you have a corrupted hard disk or something during the mastering process. Analogue media would degrade too much to make usable backup copies, plus there's little technical issues like the azamith of the master machine used on "Blinded By The Light" by Manfred Man.

    • @SSJfraz
      @SSJfraz Рік тому +7

      There's also a lot of ignorant millennial's who are quick to jump on the "digital is better than analog" bandwagon, having never actually listened to an analog recording before. They like to parrot anything they hear from their friends and peers, who have also never listened to any analog recordings.

    • @Reed-Publications
      @Reed-Publications Рік тому +16

      ​@SSJfraz Speaking as a millennial who grew up listening to vinyl records, I can safely say that digital is far superior to analogue. I totally understand the desire to hang on to the past, and have a physical format that you can hold in your hands and appreciate, but that doesn't mean that analogue is better. I agree that there are a lot of fantastic analogue recordings that are worth listening to, but I've rarely ever hear an analogue recording that was superior to digital, and the overwhelming majority of listeners would never hear the difference.

    • @SSJfraz
      @SSJfraz Рік тому +6

      @@Reed-Publications Digital would have sounded considerably better to most people when it came out, because the vast majority of people listened to vinyl on horrible cheap turntables with terrible styluses which were often not even set up properly. I remember the first time I bought a turntable and had it all set up correctly with a decent stylus. I let the more senior folk in my family give it a listen and they said vinyl never sounded that good to them when they were younger, for that very reason.

  • @therealbluedragon
    @therealbluedragon Рік тому +66

    For me Vinyl has always been an aesthetic choice and I don’t think there’s anything objectively superior about it.
    I like listening to vinyl records because I enjoy the physical act of placing the record down and positioning the tone arm. It’s just so much more satisfying to me than bringing up Spotify on my phone (which I also use).

    • @rss1956clipper
      @rss1956clipper Рік тому +7

      100% agree. Pulling out a Sinatra album, playing it on my grandparents' 1961 Webcor hi-fi, it's not about the sound (which is great) but all about the experience. Choosing the album, the physical act of putting it on the turntable, the warm-up of the tubes, the glow of the Webcor emblem light on the front of the speakers, it's all about the experience. No digital device containing millions of songs replicates that experience.

  • @fallwitch
    @fallwitch Рік тому +188

    I remember back in the late 80’s I was in Uni and was working for a business that did a lot of audio and visual work. One day I went down to the audio section and a lad was demonstrating his new CD Player and till this day I remember being completely blown away by how amazing it sounded. It was just phenomenal. I was sold right there. I saved up and bought a CD player (which were very expensive back then.) The first CD I played on it was a Quincy Jones - Back On the Block which was gifted to me. I was stunned with how amazing the sound was coming from my very mediocre stereo system. Still so vivid in my memory.

    • @Blake4625kHz
      @Blake4625kHz Рік тому +9

      My friend had the first cd player (pioneer) among us. We’d go to his house salivating 😂 playing certain parts to songs over and over. It was insane. My biggest thing to do on a Friday night back then was go to the music shop

    • @jagtan13
      @jagtan13 Рік тому +4

      I've got some ELO and David Bowie on disk for my pioneer deck in my car. The digital to analog converter is the weakest link in an audio setup. Disk and a good player is best short of using a dedicated dack and headset.

    • @jagtan13
      @jagtan13 Рік тому +8

      Oh, and another thing. Just as a laugh, I do have the Fast and the Furious Tokyo drift soundtrack on disk. The bass on the cd mix is so much better than the same tracks on Spotify. I don't know who's crushing the audio between the source and the streaming service, but this has me on the path to hunting down original releases of modern songs on disk. And, the artists earn more when you buy on disk!

    • @VIDSTORAGE
      @VIDSTORAGE Рік тому +15

      The Loudness Wars ruined CDs reputation as being better

    • @Blake4625kHz
      @Blake4625kHz Рік тому +4

      @@VIDSTORAGE to be clear, cd’s ( though I like vinyl for whatever reason) will always and irrevocably kick major ass for the lord.
      That’s bottom line.
      That’s hands down.
      And that’s word to your mother.

  • @WorkshopGreg
    @WorkshopGreg Рік тому +13

    I did CD mastering in the early 2000’s and never learned vinyl mastering. It wasn’t difficult to master a CD well, as you’re not fighting loss characteristics of the medium. It was the ‘FM Radio Car Test’ that made mastering in the 2000’s challenging - a key driver behind the loudness wars. But, that didn’t last - lossless encoding and later streaming became a thing, and a whole new era of fighting playback medium began. I exited to the profession about the time that started becoming a thing, so I can only imagine the challenges today to keep music sounding great.

  • @keithAstansell
    @keithAstansell Рік тому +7

    I recently went to the Re-release of the Talking Heads concert film Stop Making Sense in IMAX and the sound quality of that film is amazing. The 1983 concert audio was recorded on a digital multi-track recorder and is a great testament to how well digital, even in the early days, could capture the full clarity and dynamic range of a performance.
    I'm an older Gen-X guy and know that digital gets a bad rap these days just from my own memories of when it was introduced. When CDs came out, it was amazing. They gave us no hiss at all, no pops or crackle and the convenience of longer no-flip playback. They were durable if relatively well taken care of, and sounded so clear and fresh. I remember early demo listening stations in stores that would have the same album on CD and LP next to each other. The difference was night and day in the quality. Headphones and speakers at the time were advertised as "digital ready" because they had the capability of going all the way up to the 22khz frequency that CDs could reproduce and our (younger) ears could possibly hear.
    I now have around 600 CDs on shelves in my basement, many purchased new in the mid 1980's. Most of them sound as good now as the day I bought them. A few years ago I ripped them all to FLAC files, and the ripping software showed me how well they have endured. Almost all of those old disks copied over with 100% of the original bits intact. Only the really scratched ones had some loss (but nothing audible). The sound quality from those early days of digital audio is clear, noise free and not distorted.
    Poor mastering and lossy low bandwidth files have given digital audio a bad reputation. Thanks for this video reminding people that the quality of pure analog over digital is a bit of a myth and that digital can and has proven to be a high quality method of recording music, as long as it is handled and presented to the listener with care.

  • @adriansdigitalbasement
    @adriansdigitalbasement Рік тому +7

    Awesome history lesson on the wonders that is digital sound. I'm now going to listen to some of these awesome tracks you played snippets of ... on steaming! *GASP*

  • @thatwasprettyneat
    @thatwasprettyneat Рік тому +79

    I've been following you for at least 10 years. It's nice to see how your channel has become more and more popular!

  • @defaultuserid1559
    @defaultuserid1559 Рік тому +115

    I still have the first CD release of Derek and the Dominoes "Layla". It gives you listener fatigue pretty quickly which annoyed me no end because the vinyl LP didn't do that. I think you nailed it when you said the two formats are mastered differently and mistakes were made in the early days.

    • @hotwax9376
      @hotwax9376 Рік тому

      And mistakes are still made now. Google "loudness war" if you don't believe me.

    • @MrGateKing
      @MrGateKing Рік тому +5

      I'll give the LP a try lol. I couldn't understand why I prefer the Spotify version over the CD.

    • @nicholascortez728
      @nicholascortez728 Рік тому +17

      This has been common knowledge in the audio community for years at least among those of us that don't act like digital is the devil. Though it was nice to have someone bring it up so people maybe not as entrenched in the community/hobby are aware of it and stop paroting that "Digital is shrill and Hollow"

    • @shitmandood
      @shitmandood Рік тому +3

      Record the cd to tape. That should fix it.

    • @hotwax9376
      @hotwax9376 Рік тому +4

      @@nicholascortez728 I certainly don't belong to the "digital is the devil" crowd.

  • @marshalleq
    @marshalleq Рік тому +34

    I often think that apart from the physics aspect vinyl lovers are actually in love with the sound produced by the high pass filter during recording to vinyl and the reversal of that during playback. A necessity for vinyl to stop the needle flying off the record.

    • @StarAD
      @StarAD Рік тому +5

      RIAA curve.

    • @vytah
      @vytah Рік тому +13

      There was an experiment performed on a certain segment of millennials and it turned out they prefer audio with mp3 compression artifacts over high quality audio.

    • @marshalleq
      @marshalleq Рік тому +1

      Haha, that's just brilliant!@@vytah

    • @SaHaRaSquad
      @SaHaRaSquad Рік тому +3

      @@vytah Must have been either bad mp3 + bad taste, or a badly executed experiment.

    • @mynameisben123
      @mynameisben123 Рік тому +6

      @@SaHaRaSquador maybe just familiarity?

  • @James_Knott
    @James_Knott Рік тому +17

    I had a friend who insisted vinyl was superior. Even though I pointed out the various ways digital was better, he refused to change his mind. If he hadn't died a couple of years ago, I would show him this video.
    BTW, I first came across digital audio in 1975, when I worked as a tech for a telecom company. One thing the phone companies had to do was insert a bit of noise, as some people thought they didn't have a connection, when the line was so quiet.

    • @roygalaasen
      @roygalaasen Рік тому +3

      The noise thing you are talking about is still a thing. Not sure if it is a generational thing, but i get flustered if there is no noise, thinking the connection dropped.

    • @gh0stcassette
      @gh0stcassette Місяць тому

      If you still know anyone in that industry can you ask them to stop lmao, I hate that sound with a passion, having grown up mostly making calls through voip or social media apps in the 00's which don't do that, and that annoying hiss is why I hate when someone insists on an old-school phone call

  • @krnlg
    @krnlg Рік тому +47

    I love my vinyl and my cassettes. I think I just got fed up of Spotify, it felt like it was making music and albums kinda meaningless. So when I inherited an 80s hifi system I was very happy and went off buying second hand LPs.
    I had assumed they were entirely analog from recording to pressing and didnt think much about it until I found a 1978 recording that very proudly boasted about its digital nature, complete with a long description of how digital recording works and its advantages.
    Its a good job I didnt primarily get into it for the warm tone or whatever! As long as I can still get vinyl, second hand and new releases, I'm happy!
    And its damn cool that on the vinyl itself it is essentially analog, in the sense you can see the grooves and so on, even if it is a kinda analog representation of an original digital recording. I like the physicality, in a world of invisible digital bits :)

    • @Vanity0666
      @Vanity0666 Рік тому +3

      You can put a vinyl record in your mouth and spin it on a needle and it will play the sound inside of your own brain through bone conduction, meaning it is fully analog and not at all digital

    • @felinoaaron846
      @felinoaaron846 Рік тому

      Try to get an reel to reel machine and try some reel tapes 4 track in 7 ips, you will see

    • @RennieAsh
      @RennieAsh Рік тому

      You know what's also invisible? Music that you hear

  • @Helvetica_Scenario
    @Helvetica_Scenario Рік тому +153

    You'd think people would understand that vinyl is just a delivery format for the music. It doesn't impart any magical quality to it, just like a cd doesn't magically worsen it. Like you said, it's all about the mastering.

    • @GeoNeilUK
      @GeoNeilUK Рік тому +7

      Well, I've upgraded my listening experience...
      ...from a Xiaomi Android mobile phone with Bluetooth headphones I bought from Lidl to a Sony Android mobile phone with the same Bluetooth headphones I bought from Lidl!
      Who needs hi-res FLAC when your listening through downsampled SBC?

    • @mycosys
      @mycosys Рік тому +5

      It requires special mastering and adds distortion. it does sound different quite often

    • @hotwax9376
      @hotwax9376 Рік тому +9

      And mastering is the entire reason why vinyl usually sounds better than digital despite no real technical advantage.

    • @nicholascortez728
      @nicholascortez728 Рік тому +22

      ​@@hotwax9376the simple fact that they can't just slap the overly boosted digital files onto it is the main reason. Vinyl has been the one medium that has by virtue of its limitations been able to stay out of the loudness war.
      I have so many albums on both CD and vinyl and the only reason the vinyl version is superior is because the tracks aren't boosted to hell and back. I would prefer if they would master the tracks properly on both releases, but until they do that I'm happy to record and digitize the vinyl copy.

    • @vylbird8014
      @vylbird8014 Рік тому +7

      Vinyl though, /does/ worsen it. If it's really well-made vinyl played on decent equipment, it's not noticable. Indeed, the very best vinyl playback equipment around can even approach the fidelity of a thirty-quid CD player from Argos.

  • @senorverde09
    @senorverde09 Рік тому +8

    What's cool about Moroder's E=MC2 is in the titular song at the end of the album actually has Moroder reading the album credits out through a vocoder. There is indeed a part where he says 'recorded live to digital'. But great video. I've been telling people that most popular records have come from digital masters for years.

  • @dustycarrier4413
    @dustycarrier4413 Рік тому +87

    My problem with the audiophile community has always been this obsession with the idea that quality of equipment makes this wildly of a difference...when in reality, the biggest issue is and always will be listening environment and sound quality. The majority of modern, even really cheap stuff, equipment will provide the same quality as relatively high end equipment from the 80s and 90s. The biggest ways you could improve your listening experience in today's world are things audiophiles are largely uninterested in. A key example in my experience being multi-channel or positional surround audio.

    • @Sheltada
      @Sheltada Рік тому +2

      Pretty much every album is in 2 channel stereo though. Anything over 2 channels can’t make a difference. If you have a 5.1 surround system, it will only play through the front two speakers and the subwoofer

    • @gclip9883
      @gclip9883 Рік тому +9

      What exactly do you mean by equipment? I will mostly agree with dac/amp/cables, but speakers absolutely make an audible difference irrespective of the listening environment. A 300$ speaker completely blows a 100$ speaker out of the water. Similarly 1000$ can get you significantly better sound compared to 300$. There is a point where you will have diminishing returns, but you can't deny that there can be easily identifiable differences between speakers.

    • @HereComeMrCee-Jay
      @HereComeMrCee-Jay Рік тому +6

      Yes, speakers make a huge difference.

    • @emyshini
      @emyshini Рік тому +1

      Speakers are tuned and made differently by every manufacturer out there. Some are more bass heavy, others offer more clarity between sounds, and some are just muffled garbage. You get what you pay for with diminishing returns on speaker equipment, be it headphones, ear buds, bookshelf speakers, computer speakers, and Bluetooth equipment. Certain compression methods can actually be heard if you have excellent hearing and train yourself to notice little differences. Do you listen to music with a bunch of instruments creating a huge harmony of sounds or do you listen to simple pop songs? Genre also has an impact on what speaker equipment you really need for the fullest experience.
      I used to rock skullcandy fullmetal jackets thinking they were the greatest, then I got DUNU DN2000s for 4x the price and it was a night and day difference in overall sound quality and experience. Same thing can be said about old bookshelf speakers being better than my higher-end logitech computer speakers, which both get blown away by my Monoprice studio monitors. These days I'm satisfied with my Sennheiser HD58x jubilees I got off the massdrop for over ear audio and my monoprice speakers for normal daily use. Premium sound without the huge price tag. I used to be repulsed with Bluetooth audio but these days it's getting better. Still not quite to the level of hardwired sets though.
      You mention multichannel and positional audio, I assume you're talking about spacial and 3d audio. I had a headset that was designed for this kind of stuff. It was only ever really useful when playing video games that utilize spatial audio. Most music is not produced to be played this way but it would be amazing if it were. I'd love to feel like I was in the center of an orchestra being blown away from all sides with beautiful sounds.
      In the end, it's all about your ears, genre, and what you want out of music. If you want to hear every little detail with extreme accurate reproduction and clarity, you need better output devices and probably a decent dac/amp. Even then, you may be able to get by without those. My headphones get driven just fine by my phone and computer because they were designed that way and my studio monitors have built-in amps. Could the experience be better? Maybe, but do I need it? No. Would it be nice to have down the road? Sure why not.
      One final note I have to say and it's a little story of mine. Had a coworker that used cheap headphones from Walmart and thought that was all she ever needed because it sounded fine to her. She insisted she didn't need anything else because its just speakers and the phone processes the music. When she tried my sennheisers out for the first time her mind was blown. She heard sounds she never knew existed in her music because it was muffled and mixed in with other sounds. It brought a whole new meaning to her love of her favorite songs. Idk what it was she was listening to, never asked. But I do know that quality can make a difference if it impacted her that much. It's too bad dedicated audio shops are a rare find these days, I'd totally recommend going out and trying new equipment before buying.

    • @patthewoodboy
      @patthewoodboy 11 місяців тому

      the audiophile community is populated with OCD nut jobs

  • @Icecube095
    @Icecube095 Рік тому +25

    My grandpa had a huge reel to reel tape player from the late 70s and as a kid I was blown away from the audio quality, because I listened to cheap cassettes before - so whenever I hear an audiophile person praising the quality of vinyl I say “hold my grandpa‘s reel player“ 😅

  • @hicknopunk
    @hicknopunk Рік тому +22

    I'm a heathen with a Sony ES CD player with a tube amp built in replacing the stock amp. To me that is the ideal way to listen to music. CDs are just so much more convenient than records. CDs don't wear from playing the same track over and over. CDs are cheap, etc.

    • @shitmandood
      @shitmandood Рік тому +2

      They get scratched and they can stop working after 10 years…become hard to read. If you want something that lasts, try tape. I’ve got cassettes still playable after 30 years.

    • @westelaudio943
      @westelaudio943 Рік тому +6

      CDs hardly go bad. When they do it's usually CD-Rs or they were stored in a damp location which corrodes the aluminum layer.

    • @hicknopunk
      @hicknopunk Рік тому +7

      @@shitmandood i have only had 1 LD rot on me. My oldest CDs are from the early 80s and they all work. I never scratch them and if I do, I buy another. I also have a lot of surviving tapes too, but I need to re-cap my tape recorder and can only play them on old Panasonic Walkmans. On the go I use FLACs anymore on my S9+. Every CD I own I have ripped myself and I also love CDs because they are easy to rip.

  • @WDeranged
    @WDeranged Рік тому +13

    I recently got a copy of Oingo Boingo's 1994 album 'Boingo'. It's a new release having never been put out on vinyl before. It sounds staggeringly good. One of the best sounding records in my collection. And of course, it was digitally produced.

  • @korhonenmikko
    @korhonenmikko Рік тому +42

    I've said this a million times but the difference is not analogue v. digital, it's how well the record was mixed and mastered. I have good sounding and bad sounding LPs and CDs in pretty equal proportion. Of course LPs are objectively inferior to CDs when it comes to frequency response, dynamic range and distortion.

    • @proteusblack8913
      @proteusblack8913 Рік тому +5

      Agreed. My 80's pressed Simon and Garfunkel'greatest hits sounds extremely bad, flat and horribly mixed and mastered while my Ghost - Impera record is one of the most clear and fantastic sounding records in my collection.

    • @hotwax9376
      @hotwax9376 Рік тому +1

      Maybe in theory, but not in practice. In reality, it's CD that is generally inferior to vinyl in all those categories because of loudness war hypercompression. In short, vinyl sounds better because it's mastered better, not because of any inherent technical advantage.

    • @kwd-kwd
      @kwd-kwd Рік тому +5

      @@hotwax9376 you just confirmed what most are saying, it's in the MASTERING not the format. Agree with the consensus while pretending to disagree with it.

    • @hotwax9376
      @hotwax9376 Рік тому +3

      @@kwd-kwd Not really. He said vinyl was inferior to CD if that was true in both theory and practice, when in reality it's the opposite in practice due to the loudness war.

    • @korhonenmikko
      @korhonenmikko Рік тому +3

      @@hotwax9376 I said that CDs have measurably better performance, which is just true. And then I said that you can't say that either CDs or LPs are categorically better mastered than the other format.

  • @aternias
    @aternias Рік тому +4

    I like Vinyls because it forces me to listen to the whole album without moving the tone arm to my favorite tracks. Also I like the art, especially on special edition vinyl’s with artwork and stuff.

  • @imark7777777
    @imark7777777 Рік тому +3

    Well said. And to add to that about 10 years ago I did a recording seminar at a local recording studio. The guy was telling a story about how he had a band he wanted to mixmaster and record everything analog tape since he had to tape machine. They got through the whole process went to submit for oppressing and the company they contacted said send us the CD… But it's mastered to tape! Which means they had to digitize and send, as at that time most if not all facilities had transferred to a digital system. Everything has to do with the mastering!

  • @pdow52
    @pdow52 Рік тому +79

    The real issue isn’t the playback medium, but whether or not the music was recorded, mixed and mastered digitally, and it’s not necessarily inherent to that medium. Music today is terribly produced, there’s no stereo imaging, everything is pushed to the front and made loud, and people aren’t doing things by ear, they’re going by waveforms on a screen. There’s also way too many effects and tomfoolery. Recording on analog tape makes it MUCH harder to muck around. The real solution is to go back to old school style production, not necessarily analog, but it definitely helps. If I’m a recording artist, I’m insisting on recording on tape.

    • @lo2740
      @lo2740 Рік тому +17

      lol, you have no idea of what you are talking about, the level of audio engineering these days is light years ahead of what it has ever been.

    • @Im-BAD-at-satire
      @Im-BAD-at-satire Рік тому +30

      ​@@lo2740 Things can most definitely be light years ahead in time while at the same time be terribly produced.

    • @pdow52
      @pdow52 Рік тому +8

      @@lo2740 that’s one of the many problems. Overproduction is a massive issue. You’ll end up with a sound that’s way too sterile, without the slightest hint of liveliness or warmth. It’s why bad production from the 1970s, like the early KISS albums, sounds so much better than “good” production today. One example of this is reverb. The idea of natural reverb, that is, reverb that isn’t an effect but the result of recording in an enclosed space that doesn’t have soundproofing foam, is extremely foreign and bizarre to modern producers because it goes against everything they’ve been taught.

    • @pdow52
      @pdow52 Рік тому +2

      @@lo2740 I also forgot to mention albums with stripped down production that’s meant to be intentionally bad like the British metal band Venom. Raw production is their specialty, it’s a part of their sound.

    • @Texan1048
      @Texan1048 Рік тому +8

      Nowadays you push a button, get sound, cut/paste it where you want. Bsck inthe day they spent hours, days, weeks, trying to create a sound effect they were looking for. Real creativity like that is dead, and music suffers for it.

  • @casualretrocollector
    @casualretrocollector Рік тому +66

    This is my favorite video from you to date. I’m an audio engineer by trade myself so I’m in heaven seeing iconic early digital recording systems! Great one! 👌🔥

  • @JustPeasant
    @JustPeasant Рік тому +33

    I can verify this firsthand. I have a high-end (from the '80s) stereo. It costed

    • @TorutheRedFox
      @TorutheRedFox Рік тому +3

      another factor is that a lot of people since the early 2000s listen to music through lossily compressed formats, which sound significantly worse when the volume is low

    • @JustPeasant
      @JustPeasant Рік тому

      @@TorutheRedFox That is also correct. Yes, loudness war is a thing, but also other compromises that had to be taken into consideration.

    • @nickwallette6201
      @nickwallette6201 Рік тому

      @@JustPeasant I don't think that IS correct. I spent a lot of time comparing compression algorithms back in the early 2000s. I compared a lot of MP3 compression utilities, and compared bitrates, and then did it all again when I got my first iPod and had access to AAC.
      What I can tell you is, with LAME encoding MP3s at max quality, a 160kbps stream usually sounds good enough, but complex material can be troublesome. At 192kbps, it's good enough for anything but critical listening. At 256kbps, it's all but completely transparent. At 320kbps, good luck identifying the difference between that and raw PCM.
      With AAC, I found that 128kbps was a fine compromise between space and quality for on-the-go listening. iTunes started selling 256kbps, which is close enough to perfect that it doesn't matter anymore.
      Compression algorithms weren't ever really a problem. The implementations had to be good (I found some encoders that made 320kbps MP3s that were unlistenable.. just awful..), and at least for a long long time (not sure about now), nothing could touch the iTunes encoder for AAC quality. I kept trying FAAC, and kept going back to iTunes.
      Now, about all those people listening on tiny devices... That's absolutely true. But the thing that drives me nutty: You don't have to ruin it for everyone else! All those tiny devices are already putting everything through massive amounts of DSP. Just compress the dynamics on playback, and leave the source material alone! Then, if you HAVE a nice stereo, you can still take advantage of it. But no. Everything is mastered to be played from something with less fidelity than an alarm clock radio, and expensive equipment just plays the same awful sound, except louder.

  • @kyomori
    @kyomori Рік тому +5

    Thank you for the interesting video. From a production PoV, digital recording makes things so much easier and moldable (maybe a bit too much, but that's another topic). From a pure listener's PoV, some times analog media is better and sometimes digital media is better.. depends on the recording/mastering, as you said.
    With that said, I am 80% vinyl at this point because .. I have the time and means to indulge in that ritual experience at this stage of life. Many of the albums are digitally recorded, for sure. But, I prefer the whole musical/visual experience of watching a record spin... crackles and pops (and the hum of the tube amp transformer) included. I personally find it more immersive, for whatever reason.

  • @abaf209
    @abaf209 Рік тому +1

    Not only you gave excellent arguments against those misconceptions, but you also made a very passionate retrospective on digital recording.
    Thank you very much for this video!

  • @galacticusX
    @galacticusX Рік тому +22

    Wow, these enormous digital recording consoles used so much hardware. Now, you can practically consolidate them into a small box or even a mobile device...

    • @Selrisitai
      @Selrisitai Рік тому +7

      Yeah, isn't it awful? Give me clunky buttons any dang day of the week.

  • @plasquatch
    @plasquatch Рік тому +8

    I figured a lot of LPs nowadays are digitally-sourced because they want to use the aging, fragile original tapes as little as possible. I remember reading somewhere that the Byrds' master tapes became so worn out from constant reissues that they had to go back to the multi-tracks and create new mixdowns in the mid-90s.

  • @eddiewillers1
    @eddiewillers1 Рік тому +26

    I have some rock/pop CDs from the mid-80s, on smaller labels, that were obviously just straight digitizations of the analogue master tapes - you can hear the tape hiss, the print-through, the drop-outs. It adds to the charm.

    • @mateuszorlinski7334
      @mateuszorlinski7334 Рік тому +2

      Most labels, like Polydor did the same thing. Releases for 80's sound great.

    • @5roundsrapid263
      @5roundsrapid263 Рік тому +2

      The problem was that a lot of them had pre-emphasis for LP (The RIAA phono curve). That’s why people thought CD’s were thin and shrill.

    • @mateuszorlinski7334
      @mateuszorlinski7334 Рік тому +2

      @@5roundsrapid263 RIAA is like Dolby NR, correction is applied before pressing, and mirrored curve is applied during playback. All Phono preamps should do this de-emphasis process.

    • @5roundsrapid263
      @5roundsrapid263 Рік тому +4

      @@mateuszorlinski7334 Yes, but CD players don’t use a mirrored curve. Some early CD releases forgot to take the phono curve off, and the treble was way too high.

    • @mateuszorlinski7334
      @mateuszorlinski7334 Рік тому

      @@5roundsrapid263 I guess you're talking about late 80's releases, becouse it would be weird, that somebody in PolyGram labels (owned by Philips) would forget about the phono curve before mailing the masters to the only pressing Plant in Europe

  • @rafiexperimental
    @rafiexperimental Рік тому +3

    Imagine building something so better that people start to hate on you. Digital is plain better engineering retains details far better than analogue. Noiseless subbass is one of the main reasons why movies nowadays feel so immersive

    • @rafiexperimental
      @rafiexperimental Рік тому +1

      Also imagine having to setup an overly complex analogue setup for surround sound... ew

  • @TonyP9279
    @TonyP9279 18 днів тому +2

    Herb Alpert and George Benson? I haven't heard those names in years! I remember when they were in regular rotation on the radio.

  • @RowanJacobs
    @RowanJacobs Рік тому +7

    Not surprised that arch-perfectionist Fagen would have been an early adopter of digital. The Nightfly is such a great-sounding album.

  • @Drmcclung
    @Drmcclung Рік тому +21

    I still remember clear as day hearing my first true digitally recorded album on a digital media somewhere around 1988, Stevie Nicks's Belladonna (one of my favorite albums), on CD, after having only known the LP version from when the album was first released, and WOW what a huge difference compared to the LP. It was jaw dropping. To this day still can't quite wrap my head around how or why the two sounded so different since CD is still technically an analog playback when it gets to the speakers by way of the DAC. Don't think that was the first CD I'd ever heard (first might have been a Hollies re-release??? Don't remember) but it was definitely the first time anyone around me had ever heard that huge of a difference between formats.. And that experience was the start of the end of vinyl for me. CD's it was, for albums I cared about, when budget allowed, those didn't come cheap!
    For what it's worth I honestly believe the only time vinyl ever sounded better than something else was during the cheap-cassette era of the 80's and by cheap tape I mean the kind you bought because they were at least a few bucks cheaper than the LP where a few bucks actually meant something in the 80's, for you youngsters out there! Not that cassettes were inferior in any way, there were just inferior-made casettes to choose from over others, at the time meant to be created and sold for a price.. $5 re-releases on tape intended to play in your cheap portable tape player where sound quality wasn't really the main focus, portability & price was. There were a few cases where the expensive casette version (if there was one) sounded better than the CD. Anyhow that was a long way of saying sometimes there were tapes so crap that the cheaper LP version might have actually sounded better. That was the 80's for ya

    • @Drmcclung
      @Drmcclung Рік тому +7

      Funny enough today in the not so roaring 20's the only thing roaring is my tinnitus so it doesn't matter anyway, they all sound about the same to me *now* 🤣😂

    • @cirenosnor5768
      @cirenosnor5768 Рік тому +2

      What turntable were you using and what CD player ?

    • @Drmcclung
      @Drmcclung Рік тому

      @@cirenosnor5768 oh hell, I can't really remember. Me and the sibs went through a lot of record players, stuff got traded around. I know one of the good ones we had at one point was a Technics but we had some crap ones too. And I think the CD player was JVC.. That one might actually still be around in someone's attic

    • @minkwelder
      @minkwelder Рік тому +3

      @@cirenosnor5768Good question. People act as if the playback equipment somehow doesn't matter. Even a cheap CD player should deliver good sound, but a turntable requires careful setup. I cringe now at the times my friends and I would change our own cartridge by merely placing it on the tonearm in a random position without alignment.

    • @Drmcclung
      @Drmcclung Рік тому +3

      @@minkwelder I can follow that up with something just as trite. Are you listening to the music with your equipment, or are you using music to listen to your equipment?

  • @JacGoudsmit
    @JacGoudsmit Рік тому +53

    Just like many people still (or again) like to buy vinyl, I like to buy CD's every once in a while. In the digital domain, the bits stay 0 and 1 unless you really go crazy, and I think the location where they get translated to analog should be as close to my ears as possible. But I certainly understand how vinyl can have a nostalgic impact on people. Every once in a while I see an ad or a video on a channel like this and I think: wouldn't it be nice to have a record player again? But then I remember I don't own any vinyl anymore, and I remember why 🙂.
    It just doesn't sound as good as a properly mastered CD. Even if that CD is from an analog recording. Everyone who says vinyl sounds better than CD is either listening to the wrong music (or the wrong extra loud remaster version) on CD, or maybe they think the snap crackle and pop of the record player *is* the music?

    • @albinklein7680
      @albinklein7680 Рік тому +1

      CDs just don't last. At least with my handling. I own vinyl records which I bought new as a kid in the 1970s and they survived all the teenage parties and being played thousands of times on crappy turntables. They still work. All the CDs I bought in the late 80s and 90s are scratched up, broken or lost...

    • @F_I_J_I_W_A_T_E_R
      @F_I_J_I_W_A_T_E_R Рік тому +10

      @@albinklein7680 Unless you scratch the label side where the data is, CDs can handle a surprising amount of polish. You're not wrong though, the digital nature of CDs means that they either work or don't.

    • @Alabaster335
      @Alabaster335 Рік тому +22

      @@albinklein7680 Handle them better dude, all my CD's from the 90's still look and play like new.

    • @albinklein7680
      @albinklein7680 Рік тому

      @@Alabaster335 i just stay with vinyl records and flac. CDs never caught on to me. Sorry. I just don't like that format.

    • @tfoksieloy
      @tfoksieloy Рік тому

      A lot of good masters do not exist in any format but vinyl. Record companies are scraping them off in order to prolong royalties and shit, for example on streaming sites you only get the last master (which is usually the worst). A lot of real good music has never been transferred to CD. Only way to enjoy it is to hunt down the old records.

  • @mikosoft
    @mikosoft Рік тому +2

    I always laugh at "audiophiles" who claim vinyl has better dynamic range. Best vinyls get to around 60dB of dynamic range, basic CD digital format is like over 100dB. That is a difference between a boom box and a professional audio equipment.

  • @rawl747
    @rawl747 Рік тому +8

    You make some very good and salient points regarding vinyl produced from the 80's onward. However, by far the vast majority of my collection and of many others was produced and even purchased prior to the move to digital mastering. Plus, in my case, my playback equipment also dates back to the 1970's. That said, at my age, I am fortunate enough in the hearing department to still be able to enjoy a CD or vinyl recording but would be hard pressed to tell the difference, LOL!

  • @TKRVideoCentral
    @TKRVideoCentral Рік тому +55

    Excellent piece, dude - I've always said that it isn't the medium, it's how it's used. If you have well mastered digital, it's going to to sound fantastic. Same with analog. I'm a lover of MUSIC, and I don't care what medium it's on as long as the quality is there, and these days most of the time it is, no matter how it was recorded.

    • @alexatkin
      @alexatkin Рік тому +4

      It makes me sad the number of times I've heard a song in a movie and it sounded night/day better than the CD, because for movies they have to follow rules for dynamic range set by Dolby, etc. Even a lossy Dolby track often sounds better, though I can usually tell the better dynamics from a lossless one.
      This is another thing that makes me sad today, so much stuff streaming only where the audio bitrate is way too low resulting in a flat audio track.

  • @CARLiCON
    @CARLiCON Рік тому +42

    would be an interesting test for audiophools, play AAD, ADD, & DDD recordings & see if they can tell the difference

    • @JackBealeGuitar
      @JackBealeGuitar Рік тому +17

      No need, they won't have a clue

    • @tfoksieloy
      @tfoksieloy Рік тому +8

      A lot of tests like that have been done by audiophiles. At least those that actually care about things like that. I did them myself. As long as the resolution of ADC and DAC is high enough, it takes a long time to spot problems. For example, grab a recording, play through mediocre dac at 24bit 48khz, into a ADC at same resolution (or higher). Repeat. It takes about 16 times before it starts sounding off. You can spot deterioration from step 1, by inverting the signal and merging (it is not a flat line). But audibly it can't be heard in ABX till a long way down the chain. With good enough DAC and ADC though you get it perfect first time and can repeat as many time as you want, you get the same file every time.

    • @Eightplex
      @Eightplex Рік тому +5

      The problem is - we don't have recordings that were made at the same time that have all three. A great recording engineer can make great digital while lousy engineers can masacre analog. There has not been a test to date that can hold all variables as the same. Putting a piece of music on and then proclaiming that you can't tell if it's AAD, ADD or a DDD recording is stupid. It actually proves the opposite - that digital can't be distinguished from analog when done right. So, which is the best? The analog or the digital? The equation can't go oly one way - they can't tell so digital is great without putting in - they can't tell which means that analog is superior. I don't have anyone who has heard my system be able to tell that a recording was coming from my vinyl (recorded with a full analog chain like Kevin Gray does) player over my digital player. I have heard that my system is the best audio they have ever heard. When I play Carly simon's Anticipation and they hear the drums come in from an OG recording off of LP they look at me and ask, "How do they do that? How come the drums are so real? How come it sounds so good?" They have never experienced audio on the level they experience and then they are believers in vinyl even if they have a $70 Sharp turntable and cartridge.

    • @xaverlustig3581
      @xaverlustig3581 Рік тому +2

      It would have to be of the same recording for a meaningful comparison, so it's unlikely to exist.

    • @halfsourlizard9319
      @halfsourlizard9319 Рік тому +1

      @@JackBealeGuitar Snake oil only works when u know you're taking it.

  • @NJRoadfan
    @NJRoadfan Рік тому +11

    Good mixing and mastering goes A LONG WAY in the final product no matter the format. I've heard plenty of lousy recordings and it certainly wasn't the fault of the media. The issue with frequency drop-off on early CDs was inexperience with the medium. It was the first mass market digital music format and folks quickly figured out how to master for it. Likewise there are people now who just dump their digital masters to vinyl and wonder why it sounds like crap.
    The "analog hides the flaws and limitations of the media" thing happened with video too. Remember when you first saw standard definition TV on a HD flat panel? Your average shadow mask CRT TV hid the flaws since it couldn't resolve fine details in video (like a natural Gaussian blur). Meanwhile your flatpanel at 3-5X the resolution magnified them.

  • @JFish-xj8oj
    @JFish-xj8oj Рік тому +3

    So many folks in these comments have never been in a studio, mixed a record, or listened to differences between digital recordings and analog records in that environment. There are so many minuscule details which can effect the ultimate playback sound quality. More than anything else, where this becomes audible is in the mixing and mastering stage. There is also something we refer to as euphonics, or pleasing distortions that are entirely impossible in digital space. Also missed from this take is that 2” magnetic tape remained the standard mix down, even when the multitrack recording may have been recorded digitally.

    • @chrism2964
      @chrism2964 3 місяці тому

      In other words the analogue 'colours' the sound, which most people with sense already knew. Trouble is audiophiles spend thousands to try to get as 'transparent' a system as possible, which is ironic given that digital is the most transparent media, and analogue stages are the thing colouring the sound, always were, always will be.
      Ultimately it boils down to a preference, if you like the coloured analogue sound then fine, I just wish 'audiophiles' would be honest about it, rather than spend so much energy justifying their preferences, which is really all they are doing. All the BS written about the topic is really nothing more than that.

  • @jagmark10
    @jagmark10 Рік тому +3

    Soon there will be AI apps that can generate songs in minutes and give you copyright for everything. You'll be able to generate 100 songs in a day and even get different album artworks for your albums you've created that day. Soon anyone can be a musician and I promise that many will say they are after they publish their AI generated album on social media. This is what's coming and this is why the word 'digital' is going to be related to computers in the future and the word 'analog' is going to be like gold because it's a more expensive and manual process.
    I really think people will appreciate tape recorders in the future because they are so cool. Just like classic cars, if you compare a 1965 Jaguar E-type with a Tesla from 2023, I think most people would wonder why we don't put style into things anymore. Back then, we used the best materials to build things and now we use the cheapest to save money. It happened to classic cars and it will happen to the music industry too and that's why analog and tape will be 'better' and more interesting in the future than anything that's digital. In a world where digital is everywhere, we should strive to keep the vinyl record as analog as we can!
    99,9% of every vinyl record made in 1950s, 1960s and 1970s were fully analog and made by skilled engineers and real musicians like Glenn Gould.
    99,9% of every vinyl record made today are made from a digital source by people who like things to go fast so they can go home earlier to stare at their smartphone.

  • @01chippe
    @01chippe Рік тому +10

    I am so glad you posted this. It’s insane what gets posted in the Record Collector Facebook groups. There is such a disdain for “crappy” digital music. Vinyl sounds better. The only thing vinyl offers over properly mastered digital music is surface noise, crackle, pops and ticks.
    It’s insane the amount of time, money and space the vinyl snobs allocate to their “hobby”.

    • @BrunodeSouzaLino
      @BrunodeSouzaLino Рік тому +4

      Which further pushes the argument that the vast majority of audiophiles don't understand anything about audio.

  • @ElectroPotato
    @ElectroPotato Рік тому +9

    I'm a huge vinyl fan, but i'm getting more and more into CD collecting, because i realised how amazing they CAN sound. I usually stick to vintage (1983-1994) releases because in many cases, they simply slapped the vinyl master on the CD, thus they sound identical, but without the crackle and inner groove distortion.

  • @justjoeblow420
    @justjoeblow420 Рік тому +8

    You hit the nail on the head as this is what all of us with any ties to the recording and music business have been saying for a while the solution to the sub par masters isn't going back to analog like people think but better mastering and mixing. Which has improved massively as the loudness war has been slowly dying since Death Magnet, granted new record are generally a little louder but part of that is improvements in mics as well as mixes just in general being ran hotter these days before the mastering stage as gain staging isn't as much of a concern in the digital world like it is in the analog world.

    • @SockyNoob
      @SockyNoob Рік тому

      Exactly

    • @justjoeblow420
      @justjoeblow420 Рік тому +1

      @@mal2ksc Almost no one runs 32 bit float though plugins internally over sample all ready for the majority of them and running the DAW at a high bit depth like that just adds extra unused load to your machine reducing your total amount of DSP power available. 24 bit is still the industry standard in almost all applications with only sample rate varying a little bit because of historical reasons like movies often using 48khz sample rates because it's what DVD and many of the film sound systems used.

  • @c64geek
    @c64geek 9 місяців тому

    Awesome summary. You touch almost every reason why I'm actually into vinyl and sourcing records from (mostly) the 80s. They are mastered very well and often sound more livelike than the CDs of the same albums. First ruined by a dull "uncolored" mixing, later the loudness wars. If you're into 70s and 80s music, a record player is really a must and of course need to stick with the original presses, not the later remastered ones which suffer from a lot of the mistakes from modern releases in general.
    One aspect you didn't touch (which was probably out of the scope for your video anyway), is that when you play a record you usually play it from beginning to end, getting the full experience. It becomes the activity and grabs your full attention, making you listen to the songs you'd usually skip, only to realize that if they made the cut for the album, they actually do deserve to be listened to :)
    I was not aware that so much of the mastering took place digitally already in the 70s and 80s, so that's an argument I'm going to take along into the next "vinyl is better than CD because analog rules"-discussion :)

  • @wolfeadventures
    @wolfeadventures 5 місяців тому +2

    Dire Straights Brothers in Arms cd is the first DDD cd I bought. Digitally recorded, mixed and mastered. It sounds fantastic. I still use it to this day as a reference music source.

  • @Holster36
    @Holster36 Рік тому +51

    I bet some audiophiles are losing their mind.

    • @femboichik
      @femboichik Рік тому +11

      They have nothing to lose 😂

    • @shitmandood
      @shitmandood Рік тому +1

      Their

    • @Alkatross
      @Alkatross Рік тому +2

      As an audiophile, I can confirm that I have lost my mind.

    • @oswald-kp1bm
      @oswald-kp1bm 8 місяців тому

      “there”

  • @TroyGravitt-p6m
    @TroyGravitt-p6m Рік тому +4

    Not to mention the Mobile Fidelity debacle where the supposedly all- analogue pressings actually have a digital (DSD) stage. Good video

  • @Tapperje16
    @Tapperje16 Рік тому +8

    And this is why i love your videos, you make great points in all of them including this one! thanks for making it clear for alot of people to understand!

  • @cunawarit
    @cunawarit 22 дні тому +1

    I love to mess with audiophiles by telling them how much I adore vinyl and couldn’t live without my turntable. I let them nod along, totally on board, until I casually mention it’s a Bluetooth turntable… connected to a Bose soundbar.
    PS: It’s all true, and I genuinely love Bluetooth turntables!

  • @donald60s14
    @donald60s14 Рік тому +2

    I didn’t even have to watch the video. I’ve been collecting Vinyl for about 13 years now and I’ve always and still do think most CD/Digital sounds better than vinyl. It’s so clear. And matter how new your vinyl is, there’s still gonna have background noise and it only it’s worse each time you play. I still love Vinyl more for the collecting and all the different variations of pressings and releases(for The Beatles especially), and it’s fun placing the vinyl on the turntable and moving the needle, watching it spin around.
    But if I want the best/clear sound possible, I go for digital.
    I thought I was the only one

  • @JohnSmith-xq1pz
    @JohnSmith-xq1pz Рік тому +60

    Que audiofile meltdown...

    • @beefax
      @beefax Рік тому +3

      not my audio files D:

    • @MysteryMii
      @MysteryMii Рік тому +9

      The misspelling of “audiophile” makes this comment even more hilarious.

    • @cellphonesmartphone7496
      @cellphonesmartphone7496 Рік тому

      Portuguese ??

    • @JohnSmith-xq1pz
      @JohnSmith-xq1pz Рік тому +2

      @@MysteryMii I assure you that it's a feature not a bug. In the past when using the correct spelling an overlapping excited ComradeTube censorship bot would remotely said comment . No doubt I've been flaged as problematic due to refusal to tow the PC partyline...
      Price one pays for speaking their mind/subbing to "problematic youtube channels" in 20xx to 2023 I guess lol

  • @PhillyFixed
    @PhillyFixed Рік тому +10

    THANK YOU. I've been saying this for years.

  • @Max16032
    @Max16032 Рік тому +24

    There's a strong urge by the audiophile ecosystem to create and sustain the illusion of analog superiority, because both the audiophiles (who have spent ridiculous amounts of money in the hobby) and the audio companies (who have strong sales due to audiophiles themselves) depend on this environment to thrive. As soon as these people start to say things like "warmth", "3D" or "life-like" terms when describing analog formats, you know it's all snobbish gibberish.

    • @VladimirPutin-p3t
      @VladimirPutin-p3t Рік тому +3

      I recently watched a video of a guy who took a 'high end' power filter/ distribution system (or power strip, as some say) and gut the filter and several other components from it.
      He said that his new power filter unit (which no longer contained a power filter) made the music come alive!
      The physics behind this, he explained, was the special acoustic star configuration of the solid core wired ground connection.
      For this service he was charging 3 or 4 hundred bucks... Plus the cost of the original unit!

  • @el.blanco552
    @el.blanco552 Рік тому +3

    It's not quality that is lost, the art of mastering has degraded through the years, at least for popular music.
    Digital is just better period, you can emulate analog with digital.
    People like analog playback because the sound is coming from a physical vibration in the air, and the IMPURITIES and QUALITY LOSS that comes with it, that is what audiophiles like, that's the actual truth, it's not PURE sound they are looking for, They're looking for the errors vinyl will always naturally have.
    The problem these days is crappy mastering, popular music is not mastered as well truthfully, at least popular music, it's rarer to have amazing Mastering in a popular song these days. And frankly I believe engineers were better back then.

  • @pkaulf
    @pkaulf Рік тому +8

    One other thing worth mentioning is that vinyl was almost always cut on a delay from the playback of the master. This was so the cutting engineer could continually monitor and adjust the groove spacing to compensate for any drastic loudness changes that would potentially ruin a cut. More often than not this was achieved with a digital delay line, even going back to the 70s. Vinyl has a very pleasant sound, but most audiophile "wisdom" is bullshit. Edit: just re-watched this and must have missed the part at 7:50

    • @user-yk4gd1fl4z
      @user-yk4gd1fl4z 11 місяців тому +1

      Nice assumption overlord. Many many times they used the digital side by to monitor and CUT from the analog. Research things first maybe.

    • @pkaulf
      @pkaulf 11 місяців тому

      @@user-yk4gd1fl4zand how would that work? The engineer has to be able to preview what's about to hit the cutting head in a couple of seconds. Only way to do that is by having a delay. Which, by the end of the 70s, was usually digital.

  • @Tommi-C
    @Tommi-C Рік тому +16

    Great video. I still have old CD's that say AAD, ADD and DDD for the way it was mastered. I was more into CD's as I was born in the 70s.

    • @mspysu79
      @mspysu79 Рік тому +2

      Or DDDD for albums produced by Digital Synthesizers, Mixed in Protools and pressed on CD or released on DAT. Removing the last analog link the microphone :)

    • @poofygoof
      @poofygoof Рік тому +3

      @@mspysu79 I think Switched on Bach 2000 has DDDD on the label. The first time DAC it hits is yours. ;)

    • @Tommi-C
      @Tommi-C Рік тому

      @@mspysu79 I thought DDD was a far as it went. Good to know.

    • @MsZiomallo
      @MsZiomallo Рік тому +2

      ​​@@Tommi-Cand you're right, quadruple-D is entirely unofficial 😉

    • @Tommi-C
      @Tommi-C Рік тому +2

      @@MsZiomallo I thought you were right. There is always odd stuff that you never hear about that some companies use. 👍

  • @traxonwax
    @traxonwax Рік тому +14

    Much of the lore behind the vinyl obsesses is just that lore. There are advantages of analogue but they are purely sentimental or hype. No wonder why there's so many boutique sellers of very expensive products to cash in on this interest in vinyl. I can't help but think someone has come out with some sort of DSP of authentic sounding vinyl including imperfections. Another great fact based video from you!

  • @polishhotdog933
    @polishhotdog933 Рік тому +5

    Nice video,you have so much knowledge about these things.👍🏼

  • @m4rt_
    @m4rt_ Рік тому +3

    Vinyl is stored analog, so Vinyl is analog. So saying that Vinyl is digital is technically wrong.
    But saying that the song on the vinyl is digital is more correct.
    Just saying that Vinyl is digital gives off the wrong impression, since it's not the storage format that is digital.
    (Rather it is a digital recording stored in an analog format.)

  • @therealwolfspidertoo
    @therealwolfspidertoo Місяць тому +2

    I love recording my CDs and Records onto reel to reel tape. It sounds great to me.

  • @ImmortalThanos
    @ImmortalThanos Рік тому +6

    Supertramp is such a great band. Glad to see them make a cameo in today's video!

  • @theheathster2
    @theheathster2 Рік тому +31

    Yep, CD is perfectly capable of all the audio quality you could ever wish for. It’s just the mastering engineer that stands between you and it!

    • @thisislocombia
      @thisislocombia Рік тому

      and your CD player as well.

    • @Ray-dl5mp
      @Ray-dl5mp Рік тому

      Yes it’s just sad we are getting brick walled or loudness war cd releases and vinyl releases can actually have better dynamics. It’s a crazy world, if I was a conspiracy theorist, I would think it would be a perfect reason to up charge vinyl which they are doing. Selling people the inferior format because it actually can be better. It’s such a strange world. That being said I’m going to try to go down the vinyl rabbit hole but I love high quality digital files and CDs if done well. If only we had Dolby atmos CDs I think everyone would win. The audiophiles that want the best dynamic range, and the vinyl purists can still have their thing. But as of now , we are stuck in a very strange place where the best mixes of songs can be on only a couple streaming services or actually vinyl? Whaaa

  • @AdamEbelgccengineering
    @AdamEbelgccengineering Рік тому +4

    I feel like we are reliving the 70's and 80's when I see vinyl spinning on the turntable. Great, where are the 45's at?

    • @redcomusic
      @redcomusic Рік тому

      While were at it, where are the reel projectors and top loading VCRs and landline phones on the wall? And tube TVs? See, these jack*sses are all suffering from "selective nostalgia." They will shamelessly use the latest technology for everything BUT their music, which is mostly just 1 or 2 genres and usually the low-IQ kind.

  • @adventuresinasmr1314
    @adventuresinasmr1314 Рік тому +2

    Great video and great points. I think that conflating digital with the CD format is the crux of the issue. Digital equipment in studios and mastering houses is many times better in terms of quality than the average home CD player, or even CD players that cost a couple of grand. The fact that the program audio can be squashed to achieve maximum loudness on CDs has just made things worse, as cheap op amps and DACs are pushed beyond their limits during playback. I helped my mom replace her turntable recently which presented the opportunity to compare a symphony she owns on LP with the same symphony she also has on CD. The difference was minimal. The LP did indeed have a more pleasing lower midrange 'warmth' and had a touch more dynamic range than the CD. You had to listen closely to tell, though. It was a fun exercise for me but she just wanted a new turntable to play LPs she has held onto for decades.

  • @Fidelis94
    @Fidelis94 Рік тому +2

    Thanks for making this video. Although I'm a guy in my 20s and was born when CDs were already the main thing, I enjoy collecting Vinyl records. I like the big covers, seeing the spinning disc ect... It's more of a fetish thing than a sound quality thing, we all know that. In fact, if I want sound quality I pull out my FLAC files or CDs and play those, no crackels, jumps or weird flutter. That said, I've heard some new vinyl releases that have been digitally remastered that sound better than the original, so we shouldn't be scared of digital at all, since it allows many techniques to make the sound even better. So, beware of self proclaimed "audiophile experts" that make you believe vinyl is the ultimate format. If anything, a good reel to reel tape system is better than vinyl (or heck even a good cassette tape player).

  • @5roundsrapid263
    @5roundsrapid263 Рік тому +12

    Perfect explanation! Another album that audiophiles just drool over is Dire Straits’ “Brothers in Arms”, which was digital-analog-digital!

    • @MsZiomallo
      @MsZiomallo Рік тому +2

      Wasn't that album supposed to show the supremacy of the CD? For me buying it on vinyl would be a blasphemy.

    • @5roundsrapid263
      @5roundsrapid263 Рік тому +1

      @@MsZiomallo It was even remastered and remixed in 24-bit/96KHz sampling for DVD-Audio, even though it was originally 16/44.1. They did use much better DAC’s than the original, though.

    • @Ni5ei
      @Ni5ei Рік тому +2

      ​@@MsZiomalloYup, it was the album that made people buy a CD player.

    • @craigmarciniak1800
      @craigmarciniak1800 Рік тому

      @@MsZiomalloYet even the original vinyl sounded great as well.

  • @TechGorilla1987
    @TechGorilla1987 Рік тому +5

    Let me just say - irrespective of any compression that UA-cam uses to hinder your audio-based videos, these turntable examples sound really, really good. I am listening through this chain: UA-cam -> TASCAM US-144 MKII audio interface -> Kinter Tri-Path min-amp (K2020A+) - > Bose 2.2 vintage speakers. I'm amazed at the ability to discern small variations in the vinyl copies.

  • @jasonsong86
    @jasonsong86 Рік тому +5

    Another thing which is not mentioned is that a lot of later remastered albums that were released digitally either on CD or streaming had been heavily altered to a point they sounded pretty bad. That's why a lot of people prefer looking for the original release of the said albums.

    • @DoomHydra
      @DoomHydra Рік тому +1

      That's down to personal preference. I myself prefer modestly compressed music to uncompressed

    • @1ochotnik
      @1ochotnik 11 місяців тому +1

      @@DoomHydra modestly is the key word. I've listened to some albums that have been downright crushed (looking at you, Judas Priest - "Painkiller" from 2001 Columbia re-masters)

  • @OWEN-CASH
    @OWEN-CASH Рік тому +1

    One of the few sources which rightly points out what I've been saying for years. Good sounding music is not about the format, it's about the mastering.

  • @csabasipos6525
    @csabasipos6525 Рік тому +3

    Oh boy, I love when “Audiophiles" talk about the "infinite" resolution of analog media 🙂

  • @daveidmarx8296
    @daveidmarx8296 Рік тому +5

    The first digitally recorded to become a major pop hit was actually Stevie Wonder's Journey Through The Secret Life Of Plants, which was released two months earlier (and charted higher) than Christopher Cross's debut.

    • @davidbutler8096
      @davidbutler8096 Рік тому +1

      I remember "Brothers in Arms" being triple D.
      We used to use it to show off speakers at Leo's Stereo in Ventura.
      Ahh...the good ole days.

    • @stellviahohenheim
      @stellviahohenheim Рік тому

      Stop lying

  • @MultiWirth
    @MultiWirth Рік тому +5

    I lost all my respect to audiophile gatekeepers and market when i saw things like "audiophile" mains fuses for amplifiers, gold plated CD-R and gold plated toslink cables.
    And yes vinyl can definitely sound very well, but it´s greatly limited by physics.
    They always claim it to be lossless, non compressed but what exactly is RIAA, frequency cut offs at 16kHz and so on? It´s definitely not a superior format.
    And most audiophiles don´t even know anything about what they´re talking about.
    So they just continue to buy scam products and then try to imagine hearing better sound when in reality nothing changed at all.
    I have a 12" 45rpm record of a "Chrome & Price - Automatic" which is a club banger from the late 90s to early 2000s.
    It sounds great, but the digital stream from youtube music definitely sounds more clear, has better and more detailed trebles, and all considered that it´s compressed aac audio streaming.
    There are also a few tracks i prefer from vinyl, because the digital release/mastering from cd or download simply got messed up.
    A off-centered bassline for example, which sounds absolutely weird on headphones, i prefer the version found on vinyl.

  • @ab1dq593
    @ab1dq593 Рік тому +16

    Outstanding. Thanks for debunking the myths of digital vs. analog records.

    • @Yogi-Megan
      @Yogi-Megan Рік тому +1

      Don't believe everything you see and hear on UA-cam! This debate has been debated to death in the 80's n 90's. Cd digital is unmatched when it comes to speed and attack and dynamic range, everything else, the humble LP wins. Simply put, you can't just chop music into 44.1 khz pieces. just can't. It's just not enough to capture that sound of warmth and 3 dimensional magic. Scientist can provide all and every data sheets and numbers etc but music has life n 3 dimensionality. The limitations of the agreed kHz by Sony and Philips in order to fit onto a silver disc 74/75 minutes of music max was it's limitation and downfall.
      I repeat this debate has been debated to death already back in the late 80's n early 90. One thing foreshore that nothing will ever beat the desire and need for satisfaction immediately would mean that CD will always always win out.

    • @Error2username
      @Error2username Рік тому

      ​@@Yogi-Megandont belive everything you see on youtube😂?? Having someone saying one is better than the other is like craping on a scene in front of 2000ppl. Its not up to you what other ppl like/dislike in theyr setup, its not your ears is it? 🎉😂

    • @femboichik
      @femboichik Рік тому

      @@Yogi-Megan what the fck 🤣

  • @Stefan-
    @Stefan- Рік тому +2

    I remember well buying the album "Metal Heart" By Accept in the 80´s and it stated on the vinyl album cover "32-track Digital recording" to advertise the new tech more or less, i didnt at all know that it was as common as this video indicate though. I think its great that this video points out that the masters of CD´s and vinyl isnt the same so you cant compare them and say that this or that one sounds better just due to that it is digital or analog. Personally as a songwriter/musician i think the digital revolution is fantastic and that it sounds great, now i have an affordable computerized studio to record myself and my band something that was just an unachievable dream in the 80´s when i started out. The "Science fiction" of the 80´s has become a common reality in these days including studio technology.

  • @wesbishop3790
    @wesbishop3790 5 місяців тому +1

    Say it ain't so!!!!!!!! 😂
    I've been an audio/video engineer for 47 years. You nailed it!!!!!!!!

  • @thisislocombia
    @thisislocombia Рік тому +3

    its incredible that today in 2023 the loudness wars are still a thing, there are even "courses" in youtube and other platforms that tell you that "louder=better"

    • @MysteryMii
      @MysteryMii 10 місяців тому +1

      Even though all major streaming services now have volume normalization on by default, meaning that “louder=better” is not true even when trying to game the system.

    • @thisislocombia
      @thisislocombia 10 місяців тому +1

      @@MysteryMii its kind of hilarious that they produce albums that will go through volume normalization on streaming platforms, i really wonder if this trend will ever dissapear.

  • @damonroger3184
    @damonroger3184 Рік тому +3

    I'm surprised you didn't mention Dire Strait's Brothers in Arms. One of the best selling albums of all time and it was among the first albums to utilize Sony's DASH technology. And still praised and utilized by audiophiles today to demo their systems, ironically.

  • @MrRavensFjord
    @MrRavensFjord Рік тому +10

    Great take. I used to feel self conscious when it came to comparing my listening habits with "audiophiles," but nowadays I'm more inclined to pity them. I don't need all of this expensive dedicated gear to enjoy my tunes.

    • @hotwax9376
      @hotwax9376 Рік тому

      On one hand, I notice more details when I listen to vinyl than to digital, and hence it sounds better to me. However, there's a lot of pseudoscience in the audiophile community about various things like golden cables being better than copper or digitally mastered vinyl being easy to spot, and that stuff is just nonsense. (I do agree with many of them on favoring belt drive turntables over direct drive, but mostly because they're cheaper and easier to repair, not for the reasons they cite.)

    • @shitmandood
      @shitmandood Рік тому +1

      Anything $2000 and under is considered mid-fi and not really audiophile grade. It’s that stuff that costs $5k per component on up to a million that makes you want to laugh.
      That said, the damn new reel to reel players are very expensive…mostly due to building them I guess…not because it sounds better.

  • @wolfsonn4061
    @wolfsonn4061 Місяць тому +2

    Funny all the people with perfect hearing - where are they? - Listening to music? No listening to noise!