The truth behind vinyl records

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  • เผยแพร่เมื่อ 15 ก.พ. 2020
  • Is vinyl truly better than digital? Does digital recording compress the sound or is it the opposite? Learn the truth. If you want to learn more, grab a copy of Paul's new book, The Audiophile's Guide. www.amazon.com/Audiophiles-Gu...
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ความคิดเห็น • 738

  • @ptbfrch
    @ptbfrch 4 ปีที่แล้ว +171

    Both analog and digital has the potential to sound incredible. It’s a matter of fun factor and personal preference, the way I see it. Just enjoy the music, the reason why all this stuff exists to begin with. :)

    • @troyarmatti7167
      @troyarmatti7167 4 ปีที่แล้ว +6

      Amen!

    • @jalenbunn7114
      @jalenbunn7114 4 ปีที่แล้ว +13

      I like vinyl because I love to collect records, but i also like digital because it is simply more convenient and you don't have to worry about records scratching or your stylus wearing out

    • @cmkilcullen8176
      @cmkilcullen8176 4 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      Agree !

    • @andershammer9307
      @andershammer9307 4 ปีที่แล้ว

      One of the most fun and dynamic CDs I own is copied from a direct to disc record that now sells for $100's or even over $1000 on Ebay.

    • @andershammer9307
      @andershammer9307 4 ปีที่แล้ว

      @Bobby Brady I bought the record new back in the 70's for around $17.

  • @vapingfastbreak5629
    @vapingfastbreak5629 3 ปีที่แล้ว +10

    I choose vinyl because I love the experience. Finding my system, hunting down rare or albums I really want, having a huge gatefold for the album cover, some have gatefolds and even more artwork inside, taking pride in the cleaning and adjusting or the best sound, crave digging and finding gems, learning which type of press I like. You just can’t get that with other forms of music. I love it. Nothing wrong with streams, cassettes, or cds because I use all three.

  • @biketech60
    @biketech60 3 ปีที่แล้ว +3

    At 72 , I knew all this . The difference is YOU explain it better than I typically can .Great job !!

    • @dtz1000
      @dtz1000 3 หลายเดือนก่อน

      The problem is that he didn't give the whole story. CD will not reproduce the ultrasonic frequencies above 20khz, but vinyl will. These frequencies are present in most musical instruments and have been shown to have a positive effect on humans.
      In all his videos he never gives the complete story because he just doesn't get it.

  • @raymondchew8894
    @raymondchew8894 4 ปีที่แล้ว +21

    Master quality recordings of sound are of importance.

  • @horrortackleharry
    @horrortackleharry 4 ปีที่แล้ว +57

    I was nervous about how close your forearm was getting to that no doubt very expensive cartridge!

    • @chrisrose3967
      @chrisrose3967 4 ปีที่แล้ว +5

      That was exactly my thought too !

    • @crusheverything4449
      @crusheverything4449 4 ปีที่แล้ว

      I’m sure he’s exactly as cognizant of it as we would be!

    • @klaasbil8459
      @klaasbil8459 4 ปีที่แล้ว

      Same here.

  • @richardf7885
    @richardf7885 4 ปีที่แล้ว +55

    Full disclosure Iam a vinyl fan.
    However this is one of the best explanations on this topic that I have ever heard. I have equal money invested in my vinyl playback system as into my CD system. ( I have not gotten into streaming as yet). I often prefer the vinyl version when I have both format's of the same recording.
    Bottom line as stated "it depends" on many factors and a blanket statement of one is better than the other is not a scientific approach to this topic!

    • @SuspiciousAra
      @SuspiciousAra 4 ปีที่แล้ว +6

      get into DSD or SACD, almos the same thing. not that much music out there, can only hope you will find what you like to listen, but... the sound is incredible over and over every time you listen that kind of digital. i also love analogue, got tape machines and good vinyl stuff. nothing compares with DSD

    • @mjt11860
      @mjt11860 4 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@SuspiciousAra thanks 4 the info. is dsd used only SACDs or is it also used on dvd? is 1 better than the other?

    • @sebastiannowakowski5084
      @sebastiannowakowski5084 4 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      Keywords...same money invested: in my setup that vinyl money blows the digital money out of the water in most cases.

    • @richardf7885
      @richardf7885 4 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@sebastiannowakowski5084 Agreed! As stated "in most cases"

    • @sebastiannowakowski5084
      @sebastiannowakowski5084 4 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      Richard F yeah those other cases it already is a great recording like Muddy Waters Folk singer that already sounds great on Qobuz for example

  • @dmomcilovic9185
    @dmomcilovic9185 4 ปีที่แล้ว +13

    I sold almost all of my vinyls collected over 35 yrs, been buying CDs now for 15 years, no regret as long as the mastering is good.

    • @andershammer9307
      @andershammer9307 4 ปีที่แล้ว +3

      What if one of your favorite records is mastered well on vinyl but poorly mastered on CD ?

    • @crusheverything4449
      @crusheverything4449 4 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      They’re called records, not “vinyls”.

    • @r423sdex
      @r423sdex 4 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      Some people call them, vinyl records.😀

    • @crusheverything4449
      @crusheverything4449 4 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      Dave G - True and also correct.

    • @andershammer9307
      @andershammer9307 4 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@crusheverything4449 Vinyls ? Isn't that something you wear or is it furniture ?

  • @TruthAndMoreTruth
    @TruthAndMoreTruth 4 ปีที่แล้ว +33

    I remember the introduction of the CD format, and how the world marveled on how much cleaner and clearer those early CDs sounded.
    Much wider frequency response, much wider dynamic range and near zero noise.
    Later, CD quality only improved as digital audio recording gear and computing power improved.
    Then came the 'loudness wars'.
    Then came the MP3 compression format.
    Then came streaming (a huge step back in quality)
    "Digital" went from being the best thing ever, to a dirty word.
    Public perception can be a funny thing.

    • @evil_twit
      @evil_twit 3 ปีที่แล้ว +3

      With lossless streaming like "Tidal" it is once again the ultimate King.
      Early CDs sounded prett crappy. DDD was a workflow that needed refinement. And oversampling wasn't there yet either.

    • @InsideOfMyOwnMind
      @InsideOfMyOwnMind 3 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      @@evil_twit I have Tidal, the "hifi" version. I like it but I wouldn't assign it any authority for how something should sound.

    • @evil_twit
      @evil_twit 3 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@InsideOfMyOwnMind you are free to believe in cable sound too, so have at it :)

    • @HCkev
      @HCkev 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      Well, I remember those 128kbps MP3's I used to listen in high school. Listening to them today, definitely sounds like crap. So much details lost, especially in the high frequencies (cymbals, hi-hats etc). But that was what was popular back then because internet speeds weren't very fast (I remember, it was still taking like an hour to download one song at that 128kbps bitrate) and we had low data caps. Nowadays though, unless you set it to lower quality, streaming services default to 320kbps, and let's be honest, it's very hard to tell the difference between uncompressed, unless you're A/B'ing and purposely looking for differences. And formats like ACC and OGG has higher quality for the same bitrate. But those 128kbps MP3's definitely didn't help with the reputation of digital audio.

    • @vitorfernandes651
      @vitorfernandes651 ปีที่แล้ว

      I don’t know what system you had but early cds didn’t sound better at all in general. They sounded more like fake sounds. Clean yes but not realistic. Very flat

  • @Trance88
    @Trance88 4 ปีที่แล้ว +18

    The focus should be more one how the music was recorded and mastered vs. what mass media format the mastered audio was put on.

    • @CeeStyleDj
      @CeeStyleDj 4 ปีที่แล้ว +3

      Correct! And CD Still has the ability to have a larger frequency range and accurate reproduction with no physical parts touching each other (ie. Stylus to the vinyl.)

  • @q8ymhd
    @q8ymhd 4 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    I really appreciate you being able to let me know about audio quality in very smart and easy way , thank you 🙏🏻

  • @abhimawa1
    @abhimawa1 4 ปีที่แล้ว +8

    Agree with you 100%. Especially on the mastering process. That’s what makes the most difference.

    • @beagle7622
      @beagle7622 ปีที่แล้ว

      I was thinking the same thing.

  • @HPLeft
    @HPLeft 4 ปีที่แล้ว +49

    Pops and clicks are not accurate, they're distortion - pure and simple. I used to search far and wide for expensive European pressings - and eventually, their surface noise became burdensome. I was at PolyGram when we introduced the CD and nonetheless got talked into buying a Linn LP-12 a few years later, with a K9 cartridge, as part of a high-resolution audio system build around Apogee Acoustics Calipers (still a wonderful smaller-scaled ribbon loudspeaker, especially if properly rebuilt by one of the tech authorized by Graham Keet). But I could never get past the surface noise of LP, even when compared to the same recording when played on a first-generation CD through a first-generation Philips CD player. Go figure.
    For me, the most important thing in audio is where they put the microphones and whether the engineer got it right; everything else is secondary. Analog, digital, it doesn't matter. If you put garbage in, you get garbage out. The other thing is that older analog recordings contain distortion at climaxes, in orchestral scores, for instance, that is simply not there in a digital recording. Digital recordings have their issues - but properly done they are much more capable of reproducing the sound of an orchestra playing double- or triple-forte (assuming that the engineers know what they're doing and are not playing around with levels or using too many microphones).
    IMHO, the most important component in an audio chain are the loudspeakers / headphones.

    • @ColeRees
      @ColeRees 4 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      HPLeft this guy engineers

    • @venturarodriguezvallejo9777
      @venturarodriguezvallejo9777 4 ปีที่แล้ว +6

      Absolutely agree.
      Since CDs and players were into the market (beginning the 80's), I said "goodbye" to vinyl for ever.
      To my relief, I had not to hear "clicks", "clocks", "plings", "plongs", "hisses", "rumbles" and so forth anymore.
      And, at least in my case, it wasn't a question of convenience, but of listening peace and pleasure (at last!).

    • @theragingdolphinsmaniac4696
      @theragingdolphinsmaniac4696 4 ปีที่แล้ว +8

      Good quality vinyl doesn't make those extra noises. I have a 180 gm pressing from the 70's that's clean and crisp and you'd think you were listening to HD digital unless I told you otherwise--I'm still shocked every time I play it. Unfortunately, that's the exception and not the norm.

    • @venturarodriguezvallejo9777
      @venturarodriguezvallejo9777 4 ปีที่แล้ว +6

      @@theragingdolphinsmaniac4696 You're very right: that is the rare exeption and not the norm, even for 180 gr vinyl pressings.

    • @paulmadrid2388
      @paulmadrid2388 4 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@venturarodriguezvallejo9777 ? We

  • @abdelkhelil6629
    @abdelkhelil6629 4 ปีที่แล้ว +7

    Dear Paul thank you for this excellent video. May I add that since the 80s I started to experience descent HiFi with CDs. I couldn’t go back to vinyl unless I spend a fortune on équipent which I can’t afford.

  • @adeelcyril3339
    @adeelcyril3339 4 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    Best explanation I’ve heard Paul! Thank you for making it very clear...

  • @bryede
    @bryede 4 ปีที่แล้ว +13

    One of the biggest benefits records have had is that they were the dominant format during the golden age of audio when a large percentage of the music released was mostly produced by a relatively small group of trained producers and technicians. Vinyl has limitations, but they usually don't get in the way of the music when proper care is taken. The digital age made it possible for anyone to take over the entire process themselves with the CD simply being the final storage medium and we saw a huge drop in overall production quality. This might have been a problem if the average age of the music consumer hadn't also been dropping. Today we have a huge legacy of compromised recordings and poor mastering which really obfuscates the issue of what format is really best.

    • @cjc363636
      @cjc363636 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      Also the Napster shift post Y2000 didn't help in that the record companies laid off a lot of talented people who helped make the music in the 'golden years.'

    • @maynardewm
      @maynardewm 9 หลายเดือนก่อน

      "Trained producers and technicians" who didn't know half of what we now know today and were using massively inferior equipment. A lot of their "training" was either working around technical limitations, or complete anecdotal experimentation that wasn't based on any hard data. Today, I can Google "How to record a drum set" and get better real world results than someone like RVG could have ever gotten for the majority of his career. People act like the "golden age" was so good, when RVG was recording in his parents living room at night and working as an optometrist by day, and Motown was a few random houses in the middle of nowhere that used to be a photography studio.

  • @darkwinter6028
    @darkwinter6028 4 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    Another technical point: many early analog-to-digital converters really only had about 13 or 14 usable bits of resolution, with the last two or three being overwhelmed with the converter’s internal noise and distortion - the result being that this affected the sound produced by early digital masters. Depending on the processes used and the style of music this can be either a tolerable quirk or disastrous - electronic-heavy 80’s pop and EDM, especially if it’s recorded as separate tracks and then mixed digitally, would have a very different outcome than a classical orchestra piece where it’s just two room mics going straight into a digital recorder.

  • @bryfar6178
    @bryfar6178 3 ปีที่แล้ว +3

    Paul's right about how the music was recorded and played. Some groups like ELP , Pink Floyd, Steely Dan seemed to aim for high quality studio sound. ELPs 1st lp is SO dynamic from quiet delicate piano passages to DEEP heavy rumbling low ends from synthesizer and drums.

    • @mvwoon
      @mvwoon ปีที่แล้ว

      Just listened to ELO New World Record on a nice pair of JBL L26 Decades - low end of the good stuff - and it blew my mind. I had never heard the original ELO sound.

  • @singaporethomasgiam5608
    @singaporethomasgiam5608 4 ปีที่แล้ว +16

    I still love vinyl records, love the touch and the sound.

    • @singaporethomasgiam5608
      @singaporethomasgiam5608 4 ปีที่แล้ว

      @MrLizardisle in this world if no music life got no meaning, actually CD sound also not bad, but since young we use record to listen music, so the feeling are still there!!

    • @cirenosnor5768
      @cirenosnor5768 4 ปีที่แล้ว

      All points well taken except the wow and flutter comment. With high end turntables, you don’t hear wow and flutter.

    • @Badassvidsz
      @Badassvidsz 3 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      @@singaporethomasgiam5608 I do love my LPs very much although i do love CDs too never sold any of them so far and never will :-)

  • @darkwinter6028
    @darkwinter6028 4 ปีที่แล้ว +16

    Technical point: the term “compression” is used to mean two very different things: level compression, which affects dynamic range (it’s a process of automatically turning the volume down when it gets too high, this is the sort of thing that the recording engineer chooses to use to sculpt the sound); and data compression, which comes in two varieties - lossy (where the system throws away data that it’s psychoacoustic model says you won’t miss, examples include MP3 and AAC) and lossless (where it’s just a more efficient way of representing the data; the output is exactly the same as the input, down to every last bit, examples include FLAC and ZIP’s ‘deflate’ algorithm). Lossy data compression can vary in how bad it is, depending on the settings used; even with the same algorithm - the data rate being the primary factor at play here.

    • @rogerking7258
      @rogerking7258 4 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      Totally agree, but I'd add one more type of compression - the bit rate specified. In effect, this establishes the maximum quality and quantity of digital information available, because despite excellent interpolation between sample points you are always going to lose data. Whether this matters or not to the ear can be debated for ever, but in theory, analogue will ultimately be better because there is no loss whatsoever. Now, of course, in the real world we don't come near to achieving that, nor do we achieve the lack of background noise, or the dynamic range, or zero clicks from scratches and faults on the record; so it's a theoretical advantage that can't actually be realised at present. I do wonder if at some time in the future a new way of recording analogue will be developed that gets round these issues. In the meantime, it was nice to see this video state the truth that dares not speak its name - namely that it's the quality of the recording and not the format that has way more influence on sound quality than all other factors put together.

    • @chrisantoniou4366
      @chrisantoniou4366 4 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      @@rogerking7258 I think that too much emphasis is placed on the fact that digital recording will inevitably lose some information. A good digital recording will record sound at the highest bit rate possible, at the highest sampling rate possible and introduce no compression of any kind. It WILL lose some information, but the amount and type of information loss is trivial and totally insignificant. It is NOT true to say that analogue recording loses no information, it does, LOTS. The difference is that it can't really be quantified and it is assumed that just because a complete waveform is recorded that it is necessarily more accurate than a reconstructed digital waveform. This assumption is false.
      It should also be recognised that a digital recording will only necessarily lose information at the recording stage only. All other processing, recording and pressing needn't introduce any further degradation to the sound. With analoge, every step from recording to vinyl record, and there are a lot of them, will introduce distortion and losses from the original recording.

    • @ilovecops6255
      @ilovecops6255 4 ปีที่แล้ว

      use a BOSS guiat eqlizer if it is too loud or tuen don the voume on the receiver or tape playar.

    • @zboy303
      @zboy303 4 ปีที่แล้ว

      The first thing you describe is 'limiting'. Compression is both raising and lowering levels, mostly to obtain a less dynamic result than the original.

    • @chrisantoniou4366
      @chrisantoniou4366 4 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@zboy303 ...and a less accurate result as well.

  • @aussie_philosopher8079
    @aussie_philosopher8079 ปีที่แล้ว

    Such a balanced way of looking at things. Great video.

  •  4 ปีที่แล้ว +4

    I am very impressed by your factual down to earth views which I feel you are an authority in.

  • @TheBoomerPlace
    @TheBoomerPlace 4 ปีที่แล้ว +3

    Very well put. I love vinyl and have 3 turntables, but also listen to CD, FLAC, SACD, DVD-Audio, Blu-ray Audio and, yes, cassettes. I enjoy them all equally. I do use Apple Music but only when working out or in the car. Unfortunately, my old car has BOSE speakers 🔊.

  • @SWRMR
    @SWRMR 4 ปีที่แล้ว

    This is by far the most accurate and to-the-point simple analysis regarding Analogue vs. Digital audio.
    Many sound engineers agree that for sometime now, there is a different mastering technique for CDs (you can hear the brickwalled mastering, just for the purpose of car playback!) and a different one for Hi-Res files, just to promote the "superior" sound of Hi-Res audio!
    I do own some CDs from Telarc & Narada that could easily blow away many Hi-Res music files, so I do agree with you 100%.
    Thank you so much for these awesome videos, Paul!
    Keep on rocking! :)

  • @wa9kzy326
    @wa9kzy326 4 ปีที่แล้ว

    Excellent perspective. Something I'm adopting in my explanations. Thanks a lot .

  • @Dennis_510
    @Dennis_510 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Great to have both available!

  • @gregdoerr1028
    @gregdoerr1028 4 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    Honest statements, there are so many variables in both analog and digital situations. The wildest thing you can do is to find what makes your ears happy with the sound that you are listening to. Kudos, BOULDER Colorado, my hometown....

  • @tnarch
    @tnarch ปีที่แล้ว

    Great presentation of your thoughts and ideas. Thx for sharing…

  • @johnmarchington3146
    @johnmarchington3146 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    Thanks, Paul. Both digital and analogue media can sound absolutely wonderful when sufficient care is taken during the recording process.Sadly, that is too often not done.

  • @boniccie
    @boniccie 4 ปีที่แล้ว

    Paul, love your explanation in regards to different mediums qualities based on how the recording is done. My question to you is, how me as a consumer who own both analogue and digital system will know which format sound ( I hate to say better) than other format? If the 16 bit CD will sound better than a hi Rez for same album, What are the available resources out there that will allow me to choose the correct better sounding format ? Thanks again for a great informative videos.

  • @etms
    @etms 4 ปีที่แล้ว +14

    - Vinyl : “I sound better than you, I’m warm and emotionnal !"
    - Digital : "Yeah yeah grandpa, do you want to talk about dynamic range?"
    - Reel-to-Reel....having a seat and a popcorn bucket: "Don”t worry about me guys, keep going on, enjoying the show now ☺️"

  • @pompeymonkey3271
    @pompeymonkey3271 4 ปีที่แล้ว +14

    Crap in = Crap out :)
    Also, vinyl is also compressed, the RIAA curve.

    • @alexreeve
      @alexreeve 4 ปีที่แล้ว +9

      The RIAA curve is just an EQ. It does not affect the dynamics of the signal.

    • @pompeymonkey3271
      @pompeymonkey3271 4 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      @@alexreeve You are right.
      The RIAA EQ is reversed by the pre-amp. I forgot this. My bad.

    • @bryede
      @bryede 4 ปีที่แล้ว +3

      The RIAA curve is really just compensation for the way magnetic cartridges work. Since we're carving a waveform into plastic, we really want the stylus deflection to correspond to dB level across the spectrum. This is pretty much what you get with a ceramic cartridge. But, lathes needed to use a magnetic cutting system and magnetic playback cartridges began to gain popularity as the superior choice. Magnetic systems will produce less and less output as the frequency decreases because they don't produce a signal representing the amount of deflection, but rather the rate of deflection. Since the rate drops with frequency, the RIAA curve simply makes things flat again.

    • @pompeymonkey3271
      @pompeymonkey3271 4 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      @@bryede Yes. This also allows for more rotations on the vinyl without the groove overlapping itself at low frequencies.

    • @RC-nq7mg
      @RC-nq7mg 4 ปีที่แล้ว

      RIAA is most definitley compression. To think otherwise is obsured. The main issues is the lack of understanding between the differences and similarities between analog and digital compression. Analog compression, that most would be farmillar with is the use of a compressor/limiter to normalize levels across a spectrum of frequencies using filters. tweaks can be made to greatly reduce some levels and increase others. Vinyl relies on the physical deflection of a needle that if directly corresponded to the amplitude of the signal would rely on a much wider track and more needle deflection, this would also reduce dynamic range by the small deflections being overwhelmed by the larger more energetic ones. Think of the dynamic range of a 78rmp single, and how much play time is on the disc. If you apply RIAA compression, the groves are changes such that then physical deflections of the needle are normalized, reducing the space a track takes up and also increasing dynamic range by allowing the minute needle vibrations of the high frequencies to be picked out and amplified. An inverse RIAA function is then applied to the phono signal to re-create the signal as close to the original as possible. And yes there are losses and distortion introduced from the needle, cartridge and stylus, and the filters on both end of the RIAA. This is essentially an extremely simplified example of how digital compression works, by removing unneeded information and in the case of vinyl that is extreme amplitudes, and using an inverse function to restore it. Digital does the same but uses much more clever algorithms that can remove repetative information and use forms of interpolation to use existing data to recover discarded data. Viny is very much compressed, but it does sound lovely.

  • @budgetaudiophile6048
    @budgetaudiophile6048 4 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    I say we just have fun with music. Digital, Analog, I have means to do both in casual and active listening environments. Just turn it on, crank it up, enjoy the show is how I see it.

  • @MrRom92DAW
    @MrRom92DAW 4 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    Great explanation, you always have to take everything on a case by case basis. There are some things I will only ever listen to on LP, some things I will only ever reach for the CD, and then some things I will only ever refer to the hi-res download. It all depends! Ultimately I think vinyl has the greatest potential to sound most like an original analog master tape, short of a 1:1 30ips copy.

  • @bc527c
    @bc527c 4 ปีที่แล้ว +11

    A beautifully rendered answer, one of your best, imho.

  • @peterr.7429
    @peterr.7429 4 ปีที่แล้ว

    Love your reviews, well done and regards from Western Australia

  • @GoFlyYourselves
    @GoFlyYourselves 4 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    The best way is to listen to the formats and choose what sound best to you. ez 😉👌
    I listen to all depending on where I am. I think the question really being asked is, should I add vinyl?
    I did and I'm pleasantly happy with the choice.

  • @uksteve43
    @uksteve43 4 ปีที่แล้ว

    Hi Paul, I love your videos and have been watching them for some time. In fact you have helped me on my Audio system upgrade path enormously, I found a dealer here in England who is happy to let me sit and play music, swap equipment over - listen again. This video had my hackles up as soon as it was a Vinyl Vs Digital in the title but i need not have worried as you expertly explained everything in your inimitable even handed and invaluably experienced manner. I love vinyl but it is the whole process for me, a tactile and sonic adventure that I do not get with digital formats but I can hear the difference on my system and sometimes I have to admit digital does sound better, whether it is dynamics, spacial or just a better copy. Many Thanks and please keep up the excellent work you do.

    • @volpedo2000
      @volpedo2000 4 ปีที่แล้ว

      Hey Steve, what's the name of the dealer. Really struggling here in London.

    • @uksteve43
      @uksteve43 4 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@volpedo2000 Hi Will, the dealership is the "Audiobarn", 2 Feltimores Park Chalk Lane, Old Harlow CM17 0PF. The guys name is Jack Satchfield. Hope this helps.

    • @volpedo2000
      @volpedo2000 4 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      Steve Lewis Cheers Steve!

  • @chriscutress6542
    @chriscutress6542 4 ปีที่แล้ว +5

    In a perfect world the vinyl mastered disk, the CD mastered disk, the cassette mastered tape, and even the R2R mastered tape (all of these being the commercially sold versions) should be mastered for the individual formats as there are differing requirenments for each. Even iTunes and MP3 versions should be mastered individually for the format. They all have different s/n ratios, different acceptable peak levels, and different frequency limitations. In theory a 24-192 recording is going to blow all of these away but that doesn't necessarily happen when you are listening back. Some may prefer the L to R (side to side) restrictions of a vinyl disk, the bass drum and bass guitar mixed to centre of the vinyl, or the increased side to side and depth of a CD, R2R, or even cassette. 24-192 doesn't suffer these restrictions. Your kick drum kit could be panned from centre to right with a second drummer and kit panned from centre to left. Imagine what the Allman Brothers would sound like if they remixed with that in mind. With digital it theoretically doesn't matter. Ther bass guitar and kick drum could be panned anywhere as could multiple instrumental or vocal tracks. Whatever is in the stereo spectrum can go from hard L to hard R just like in real life and you could even use a 360 degree microphone and have true surround sound and be unable to tell the difference between live and recorded with 24-192 recordings. The art of mastering plays a major role in the finished product. Just like a movie soundtrack doesn't necessarily use 100% accurate sound (the footsteps, doors, clothing swishes, and a million other sounds are usually dubbed in the foley stage after the film is edited by highly trained specialists. So also music is often treated with equalization, compression, limiting, pitch variation, level riding, and many other tricks of the audio trade which can either ruin or magically augment the finished audio production which you listen to in your home theatre, music room, computer, headphones, or automobile.

    • @TheMirolab
      @TheMirolab 4 ปีที่แล้ว

      The PROBLEM is.... We were sold on a medium with a huge dynamic range of 96dB (CD), of which the current music industry is only using about 6dB. They do this to serve themselves.... to make their "product" louder... not because people like it, or that it makes the art better.

    • @tonybeatbutcher
      @tonybeatbutcher 4 ปีที่แล้ว

      word!

    • @chriscutress6542
      @chriscutress6542 4 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@TheMirolab 100% agree.

    • @vaughntonkin539
      @vaughntonkin539 4 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@TheMirolab 6dB is garbage, that's why ppl are flocking back to vinyl

  • @DavidTasche
    @DavidTasche 4 ปีที่แล้ว

    Hello Paul just signed up for your channel and I am into a lot of audio sound Vinyl and digital also I have some records in storage cause with family I am staying in a hotel but gonna purchase a turntable in the near future after getting a place to play my records on but also wanna get into digital 180 vinyl. Are there any turntables that will play both kinds of vinyl or would I need t buy 2 separate turntables? Or if I buy one turntable is there an extra device that I need to purchase to play both analog and 180 digital on one turntable. Thanks, David San Diego California

  • @birgerolofsson2347
    @birgerolofsson2347 4 ปีที่แล้ว

    Really great video/discussion of you.

  • @SuspiciousAra
    @SuspiciousAra 4 ปีที่แล้ว +4

    OMG you answered! I was like whaaaaaaaa! Thank's Paul, appreciate it (meanwhile listening to some good DSD music i have just bought). Have a great day!

    • @Peter_S_
      @Peter_S_ 4 ปีที่แล้ว

      Thank you for your excellent question.

    • @r423sdex
      @r423sdex 4 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      I have some DSD files, they take up a lot of hard drive space and for no sound gain. Who would have thought. Must be my system is not up to it or I have untrained ears. Even my wife in the other room can't tell when I play the DSD files.

  • @gzubeck3
    @gzubeck3 4 ปีที่แล้ว

    One of your more useful explanations. In a nutshell either digital or vinyl can be really good if great care is taken from beginning to end in the production process. If not your audio quality mileage may vary from format to format.

  • @snakebite69
    @snakebite69 4 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    Hi,
    Based on what you've said in this video the actual recording is an important factor when it comes to how good a cd or vinyl record sounds. That is why audiophiles tend to try and obtain either analogue versions of vinyl recordings or hd recordings on vinyl, ie 90's recordings done by music on vinyl or from a cd perspective obtain 24 bit recordings (hd) or good japanese cd recordings. My biggest issue with cd has been the loudness wars where cds do sound compressed and sound harsh to my ears with poor dynamic range. I have some cds from the 80's taken from an analogue recording that sound better than recent cd recordings. Conversley there are a number of vinyl lps taken from digital sources, sometimes they sound great, hd, and others from an 18bit source, or poorly recorded sound awful. Could you do a video discussing the advantages and disadvantages of cd vs vinyl? Im starting to lean towards cd because of reduced cost extras like dvds and blu ray you can get, and not having to worry about warped records changing the cartridge on your turntable time cleaning records and cost of vinyl.
    Regards
    Andy H

  • @jimalbruzzess2445
    @jimalbruzzess2445 4 ปีที่แล้ว +65

    The unfortunate problem is alot of the masters are crap, especially in rock/pop. The company's just turn them out and most of the consumers wouldn't know what sounds good if it was to slap them in the face. Just my thoughts.

    • @ThinkingBetter
      @ThinkingBetter 4 ปีที่แล้ว +11

      Jim Albruzzess Yes, the young studio people nowadays are probably happy with the sound you get out of a pair of crappy Apple earbuds or a cheap Bluetooth speaker. The mass market music consumer has gone cheap and smaller is better for most young users.

    • @QoraxAudio
      @QoraxAudio 4 ปีที่แล้ว +8

      @@ThinkingBetter Early CD masterings weren’t that great either...

    • @ThinkingBetter
      @ThinkingBetter 4 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@QoraxAudio Yes, your right. I just got a wake up call recently when listening to CD music from the 80s. But some CD music wasn't bad even at that time.

    • @thisisnev
      @thisisnev 4 ปีที่แล้ว +8

      @@ThinkingBetter Bear in mind that when CD first hit the market, players were expensive and discs cost three times as much as vinyl. It had to appeal to audiophiles, and it did. The first CDs were excellent. They had to be. The problems came a few years in, when all the record companies rushed to release their back catlogues on the new format and corners were cut. That, and not "the loudness wars", is the reason why many were later remastered.

    • @mdrumt
      @mdrumt 4 ปีที่แล้ว +4

      That is correct, they just play it in on their Crosley and go yup, that's how vinyl sounds, microphonic and lofi. Hifi nerds like us are only a small group of people who actually care about fidelity.

  • @eatdrinkwineguy
    @eatdrinkwineguy 4 ปีที่แล้ว

    Put very nicely. I spend alot of my time finding great recordings on sacd, cd, vinyl, high res digital etc, etc. Whatever sounds great.
    I work in high end wine and people say the same things a out organic wines, or natural wines or bio-dynamic wine. But in the end if the wine is made terribly it's made terribly. Makes no diff wether it conforms to one of the above categories. That twisting of facts is very frustrating and pervasive as I see it is in audio. Thanks Paul!

  • @GerardPedrico
    @GerardPedrico 4 ปีที่แล้ว

    Analogue vinyl records when you contemplate and stare at one and holding it for a long time... it looks somewhat like a frisbee disc and frisbee discs are what kids play with back in the 1980s decade. The sight of a frisbee disc makes you feel very young again... But suddenly that frisbee morphs into a vinyl record.
    So cool, sir.

  • @johnbartel5229
    @johnbartel5229 4 ปีที่แล้ว

    Hi Paul,
    This video is the best video you have ever done. My understanding is that, from a technical standpoint, CD or digital is "more accurate" than a vinyl record. However, humans hear in a more analogue friendly manner. Therefore more often than not the human ear enjoys the sound of records (analogue) better than a digital recording. Now, I am grossly over simplifiying this concept and I am not a recording engineer, engineer or tech of any kind. What I am is a 61 year old music lover that enjoys listening to CD as well as records. In fact, I still enjoy tape as well. I will not get into a debate as to digital vs. analogue. However, if you ask which I enjoy better it would be records simply because I enjoy the practice of cleaning the record and playing it as well as reading the covers and enjoying the artwork. I also enjoy the convenience of CD and feel that recordings that started out as digital and ended up as CD sound amazing also plus I can take them in the car with me. Am I an audiophile, yes. Do I put formats and equipment ahead of the music itself, absolutely not. And Yes I have a modest stereo system valued at about $20,000. This is all I know and have to say on this subject...Thank you Paul for making this information available to us from an engineer's point of view.

  • @grandiebob2500
    @grandiebob2500 3 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    I’ve played in bands had my own pro-audio/live sound business and a studio (I’m c70 years) I hear some terrible and great masters in all formats. Hi Res streaming (eg Tidal) is consistently good and reliable. Vinyl is inconsistent but at it’s best just as, if not more, enjoyable than digital. The format can get in the way. I just enjoy what I feel like playing in whatever format I’m in the mood to listen to it in. Excellent channel. Greetings from the U.K.

    • @maynardewm
      @maynardewm ปีที่แล้ว

      I agree. Especially today, so much vinyl is pressed so poorly. Distortion, sibilance, skipping, bad mastering, off center, no fill, the list of issues go on and on. But when you get a good record… amazing. Such a great experience.

  • @marcbegine
    @marcbegine 2 ปีที่แล้ว

    Bravo Paul, PERFECTLY explained!!!

  • @stephenmead5488
    @stephenmead5488 4 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    Very balanced response. My own experience illustrates this point exactly. I have 3 different recordings of Bernstein conducting Copeland’s ‘Billy the Kid’. Vinyl from Columbia, CD from Columbia, and Vinyl from a Smithsonian music sampler my dad got for a music appreciation college course. The recordings are all from the same master tape. The Columbia CD & vinyl are both strident, but I may prefer the CD version due to lack of surface noise. But by far the Smithsonian version is hands down superior to either Columbia version. Far greater sound stage openness and depth. Obviously better mastered. Only problem is the sampler only includes ‘Introduction: The Open Prairie’.

  • @mikrophonie5633
    @mikrophonie5633 4 ปีที่แล้ว +15

    With vinyl you get all the bonus sounds...pops and clicks.

    • @theragingdolphinsmaniac4696
      @theragingdolphinsmaniac4696 4 ปีที่แล้ว +5

      I don't miss those thanks, although I do have 180 gm vinyl that sounds clean and crisp, and you'd swear you were listening to a digital copy if I didn't tell you otherwise.

    • @j.t.cooper2963
      @j.t.cooper2963 4 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      Which makes them suck.

    • @BushiM37
      @BushiM37 4 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      Fat Rat Whoosh...

    • @theragingdolphinsmaniac4696
      @theragingdolphinsmaniac4696 4 ปีที่แล้ว

      @Fat Rat There's no magic bullet where everything sounds perfect.Z I doubt the average person is going to replace their entire collection for any format.

    • @MidwestBoom
      @MidwestBoom 4 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      People buy $1 used records and complain about pops and clicks LOL

  • @AntonioPenja
    @AntonioPenja 4 ปีที่แล้ว

    The best and most important video PS Audio and Paul has made

  • @geobopeter
    @geobopeter ปีที่แล้ว

    Thank you, well explained.
    Sometimes it becomes so stressful to shut up when people with insufficient knowledge begin to wise on such topics - when you have the technical background to know that it is rubbish they pour off.
    For example, when a "skilled" seller tries to explain why you need to use special Audio specified network cables to stream music.

  • @kusgilb
    @kusgilb 4 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    It's a personal thing. I tossed out all of my vinyl immediately after hearing my first CD and have never looked back.
    Some people love the tactile hands on of records and the clicks, pops seem endearing to others.

    • @sschmidtevalue
      @sschmidtevalue 4 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      I'm more or less with you. I always hated the surface noise of vinyl. There are tracks that I still anticipate pops in certain places, even though I ditched the vinyl copy 30 years ago.

    • @dtz1000
      @dtz1000 3 หลายเดือนก่อน

      CD does not reproduce ultrasonic frequencies that are present in most musical instruments but vinyl does. I wouldn't have chosen CD unless I could add the ultrasonics back into it.

  • @daveduffy2823
    @daveduffy2823 3 ปีที่แล้ว

    People sometimes forget that records were engineered to fit 22 minutes of music on a 12” platter ( if I remember correctly). So the lows were taken out and the highs were attenuated to fit more grooves. The turntable pre amp re-added the lows (RIAA equalization curve). You can test this by setting your turntable to line in to bypass the preamp. You’ll hear just highs and hiss. The LP plastic disk also has pink noise from just the stylus scraping along the grooves. You can get a blank LP and when you play it, you will hear noise. Music is then put on top. Maybe that low level distortion creates the illusion of breathing or warmth or whatever.

  • @claudec2588
    @claudec2588 3 ปีที่แล้ว

    So when deciding to purchase a recording how do you decide whether to purchase the CD or the Vinyl Record?

  • @wendystarita7996
    @wendystarita7996 4 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    I love it when someone like you with a modern engineering background has a long winded justification of why they know more about how one thing sounds better than another. I think the listener , hopefully a musician without hearing damage, can tell you that the dynamics on a clean analog lp is more satisfying to hear than a digital cd or mp3, etc.
    Of course, with computer aided recording techniques, an engineer is hindered by the limitations of the equipment which filters more than old equipment and can be construed as " Compression", such as limiters in the studio are called Compressors. Given the fact that old blues recordings were given dirt sound by red lining the meters, in digital recordings this is done by synthetic means. From a musicians standpoint, there are huge benefits from analog recording. You've spoke of dynamics before, as a musician, dynamics and rises in volume on an older lp are quite satisfying and more like the actual performance than a cd or much digital can offer.

    • @EricBrownBey
      @EricBrownBey 3 ปีที่แล้ว

      Agree 100%. You are intelligent.

  • @ridirefain6606
    @ridirefain6606 4 ปีที่แล้ว +7

    Agree. Though I call myself a Vinyl guy. I find that a lot of folks are really over hyping the record as the golden ticket to Audio Nirvana. Likewise, I found your listening experience really depends on the quality of the recording. I have plenty of old records totally recorded and mixed in analog that sound awful. I also have a lot of modern albums that were recorded and mastered entirely within the digital domain. Some sound good, some do not. So for me, one format is not Superior to the other. It really comes down to the level of genius behind the mixing console. Some engineers do a better job than others.
    Another observation. What defines analog these days? Can one call a Vinyl record that has been recorded and mixed solely by digital equipment, truly analog? I have found these modern records do not sound much different from their CD counterpart. Such albums do not have the same sonic flavor an notable recording from the 1970's does. Yes you can account for advances in technology, but to my ear even an all digital remix direct from the masters do not sound the same as the original release.

    • @galus14436
      @galus14436 4 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      The Jimi Hendrix Experience 3 records sounds amazing on vinyl. The Digital version is not there, at least for me.
      Most digital has a shrill sound to me. Maybe not always at first, but after some time listening, I get turned off. Most original pressings or a solid later analog pressing are softer and appealing, but not just EQ'd, it that "vinyl warmth" maybe are ears simply prefer music coming from a mechanical and physical touch. Again, for me, the digital giveaway me dar fatigue.

    • @ridirefain6606
      @ridirefain6606 4 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@galus14436 Feel the same. Most CD releases of music from the era of classic rock, sound horrible. I would wonder how an vinyl reissue that's been remixed in digital would sound? Would it have the same life as the original pressings?
      They did this with an big-buck reissue of the Beatles catalog not too long ago. They did not sound near as good as the original releases.

    • @vaughntonkin539
      @vaughntonkin539 4 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@galus14436 Digital does suck, I heard Black Sabbath on 44/128kB MP3, it was boring, broke out the vinyl version, it was way better (MP3 was played at friend's place)

  • @beagle7622
    @beagle7622 ปีที่แล้ว

    I have a Peter Nero Direct to disc LP from the 1970’s. It still sounds just brilliant. The direct to disc records were produced directly from the master I believe .I agree with every word you are saying.

  • @milanmihajlovic8569
    @milanmihajlovic8569 4 ปีที่แล้ว +26

    What I know as my ears hear is best for me. I love vinyl, and that's the truth.

    • @jaydy71
      @jaydy71 4 ปีที่แล้ว +3

      No arguing with personal taste :)

    • @Peter_S_
      @Peter_S_ 4 ปีที่แล้ว +8

      They may not be excellent from a specifications standpoint, but a well mastered vinyl record on a beautiful turntable playing through a tube amp can be downright heavenly to listen to in spite of the imperfections. Well mastered vinyl on a beautiful turntable playing through a superior amp is unquestionably a pinnacle of sound reproduction technology.

    • @exciter2506
      @exciter2506 4 ปีที่แล้ว +3

      I have to agree. Maybe a bit nostalgic, but they just sound proper. I feel the difference is in the mid-range.

    • @thisisnev
      @thisisnev 4 ปีที่แล้ว +4

      @@Peter_S_ A great recording on metal tape played on a well-engineered cassette deck is also a pinnacle of sound reproduction technology. But the technology is obsolescent, and newer technologies have their own pinnacles to reach.

    • @asmundma
      @asmundma 4 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      Peter S Adding more distortion and harmonics can sound great, yeah.

  • @coogycoogman3715
    @coogycoogman3715 4 ปีที่แล้ว

    I agree. I have found that it is down to personal preference. Everyone is different. Thanks to Paul for explaining the debate perfectly.

  • @MathijnvanderHeijden
    @MathijnvanderHeijden 4 ปีที่แล้ว

    Thanks I have always had a pretty similair view this subject as you it seems. often it feels like people in fact are asking ; what platform you personally prefer, without any specific reasoning backing it. Since most people have preferences and particulairy on this subject they forget to look at the bigger picture or to even concider that their own phono stage costs 4times as much as their digital setup. ( i am guilty of this but i always was aware of why that is,it is because i enjoy tinkering with turntables and or even making them from scratch its the whole proces and the time that goes by over long periods.And the fact that its just perfect for listening albums because skipping is inconvenient+physically seeing the process) Also not helping is that for a long time most people did not even bother to look for a solution for their digital files ( wich i did even back then not understood, as relatively a new enthousiast back then. Clearly a minijack sounded pretty horrible and a good cable of this type become pretty pointless to get as around 10-15 years ago affordable/ entry level dacs started surfacing ( hrt's music streamer f.e and there really where at least a couple of products that really should been on peoples radar. I think in general with hifi and music as a hobby part of the fun is the tinkering and experiencing differences even in recordings u know well. anyway i can go on giving reasons why people fail to properly digest your original question but i think this will do for now.

  • @muiscnight
    @muiscnight 4 ปีที่แล้ว +3

    I like vinyl because I mainly listen to 60s-70s music and can find awesome records for under 10 bucks in second hand stores.

    • @satyanpatel6403
      @satyanpatel6403 4 ปีที่แล้ว

      Me too! I still have all my stuff from the 70s and I just get more when I find it used, cheap, or sometimes new.

    • @scottsteele7109
      @scottsteele7109 4 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@satyanpatel6403 I agree, vinyl I grew up on and love the sound, but when you are talking price, CD's are now to be found used (in clean copies) for less than 2 or 1 dollars apiece at used stores. That beats the high priced "vintage vinyl" found in record stores at ridiculous prices or new albums for 20-30 dollars a copy. Now that is absurd. right now the timing allows a market flooded with CD's. Streaming is the next media step. Good luck. Thanks

  • @CeeStyleDj
    @CeeStyleDj 4 ปีที่แล้ว

    Logical, concise and common sense-based answer! Thank you!

  • @RLNTEX
    @RLNTEX 3 ปีที่แล้ว

    Excellent explanation

  • @joshuabrunetta4656
    @joshuabrunetta4656 4 ปีที่แล้ว

    Is there some sort of database that lists which records are far better on vinyl than CD? I’d love to know if it’s treated on a case by case basis

  • @iowaudioreviews
    @iowaudioreviews 4 ปีที่แล้ว

    I like both vinyl and CD. I agree with many other comments that the majority of people in this hobby tend to forget about recording, mixing, and mastering quality. These attributes make the big difference. I have a Little River Band album on both mediums and I like both for different reasons. But overall playing
    WAV and FLAC from my music PC is my main source.

  • @0neyedK
    @0neyedK 4 ปีที่แล้ว

    Hi Paul, thank for the great explanatory videos! I have another question for you: If a recording is made at 24/192 (so you don't run into traditional problems with the LPF's and ADC you need at 44.1) and afterwards, you convert it to 16/44.1 and then, you use an upsampling DAC to 24/192 when payed back (so again, no nasty filtering), would the difference still be audible?

    • @ThinkingBetter
      @ThinkingBetter 4 ปีที่แล้ว

      0neyedK Upsampling can not restore details that were lost in the downsampling. It’s like image resolution. If you take a photo of a crowd of people in high resolution and can recognize the faces, then downscale to some much lower pixel resolution where you can not judge the faces, the upscaling back to the same higher resolution doesn’t mean the faces can be recognized again. Rather jagged pixelated lines will be smoothed in such process. Similarly for audio when upsampling it, curves with rough steps get smoothed.

    • @0neyedK
      @0neyedK 4 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@ThinkingBetter I took upsampling into the equation, as it's the only way to simplify (thus improve) the LPF at the end of the DAC. (the stepup from 16 to 24 bit is irrelevant) In a digital perspective, you are absolutely correct, downsampling is loosing data, this loss cannot be recovered. Real question is, is this audible?

    • @Peter_S_
      @Peter_S_ 4 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      Consider the resolution in two contexts.... the first is the number of bits defining the dynamic resolution, and the second is the sampling rate defining the spectral resolution and bandwidth. If the sample rate is high enough, you can drop the number of bits of dynamic range down to just one bit and achieve unmatched clarity in the highs as DSD and especially high rate DSD aptly demonstrate. If you reduce the sampling rate similarly, the number of bits used is inconsequential and more bits won't help because the frequency content will be compromised. In your example, the spectral data will be truncated by the conversion to 44.1KHz and a 24/192 upsampling DAC may process the results into something better sounding by sidestepping the frequency domain issues encountered when using a slower DAC, however I believe that in a critical listening environment you would readily distinguish between a source that was better than 44.1KHz and one truncated to 44.1KHz.
      The 44.1KHz figure can be confusing because it specifies the resulting bandwidth at the Nyquist frequency and at that frequency a digital recording is only able to replicate triangle waves which smear into sine waves as system bandwidth drops. While I dearly love synthesizers of the 70s and 80s with their triangle waves, I prefer vocals and acoustic instruments to have more complex wave shapes and those shapes invariably collide and result in high frequency information that becomes more compromised as you approach the sample rate. By raising the sampling rate high enough that any wave at the limit of human perception is still digitally represented by a number of points rather than just two, sparkling highs can be captured that simply evade the 44.1KHz world. The clarity in the highs you can achieve by going beyond Red Book have been able to melt my knees in sonic ecstasy while a Red Book spec recording has not yet done that for me.

    • @0neyedK
      @0neyedK 4 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@Peter_S_ Interesting comment ;) Now tell me, what's the highest frequency where your ears can distiguish the difference between a sine, a triangle or even a square wave? (with my ears, that's up until nearly 6kHz!!!) I will not go into the DSD-debate, but there the only advantage lies in the way the DAC can be setup, wich is a clear (and audible) advantage...

    • @ThinkingBetter
      @ThinkingBetter 4 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      @@0neyedK When downsampling audio, it can be highly audible of course when the downsampling removes significant details. For example, if you downsample 16 bits PCM to 8 bits PCM your theoretical maximum dynamic range drops from 96dB to 48dB and lots of details will be lost. Of course dropping from 24 bits down to 16 bits is far less audible as what you lose are details below -96dB of max peaks. To put it in perspective, the details you lose in such downsampling would not even be theoretically possible to store and retrieve ever on vinyl as such details are well below the noise floor of vinyl.
      However, a major argument for 24 bit is that it allows headroom for attenuation (volume control), mixing and audio processing in DSPs (e.g. active cross over, EQ etc.) in a digital audio architecture.

  • @savvassidiropoulos5952
    @savvassidiropoulos5952 4 ปีที่แล้ว

    Dear Paul,
    I enjoy your videos, I may not agree with some of your views, but this one, you really nailed it. I fully agree that generalizations and sweeping statements are invalid by their definition.

  • @JohnLeaf
    @JohnLeaf 3 ปีที่แล้ว

    i like tape reel becuase i like the tapes spinning and also for record music is more easy because i hate that mouse "click" everytime yopu want to record , and more fun to fast foward

  • @craignehring
    @craignehring 4 ปีที่แล้ว

    Then there is the 500 Hz RIAA roll-off found on so many on yesterdays vinyl. Loudness contour has existed for a very long time in the "HiFi" industry.
    Fun stuff

  • @WildernessMusic_GentleSerene
    @WildernessMusic_GentleSerene 4 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    You did not mention the mystery box that determines the quality of digital music....the D to A for the audiophile and A to D for the engineer. DAC's can be a 10 cent item on your computer, or a $1000.00 dedicated hardware. Is this letter writer considering the DAC in the equation...and what program (genre) music is he listening to?

  • @380stroker
    @380stroker 3 ปีที่แล้ว

    I'd like to see the impulse response of a record to a pro reel to reel tape.

  • @johnnycampbell3422
    @johnnycampbell3422 4 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    Vinyl is a more intentional experiance which typically results in a diffrent approach to music. Consider the care required to play and maintain a record. Press and play requires less care, therefore the music is more easily dismissed.

  • @drwisdom1
    @drwisdom1 4 ปีที่แล้ว

    I have loads of records from when I was young (about 30 feet). When CDs came out I started buying them, but they didn't sound as good as my records so I went back to records - until they stopped selling them in 1989. I don't listen to them now due to laziness. But this observation characterizes the issues in this video. I have an LP of Grover Washington Jr.'s Soul Box volume 1 that is absolutely stunning. I have a different LP of that album that is muffled and has poor sound. I also have it on CD and it is quite good - unless you are familiar with the quality LP version.

  • @kevin-vt7dw
    @kevin-vt7dw 4 ปีที่แล้ว

    It's just nice to accept that your experience is much more than mine I do trust your opinion thanks for that

  • @birgerolovsson5203
    @birgerolovsson5203 ปีที่แล้ว

    Perfect said of you!! 👍👌👏

  • @grfhumpf
    @grfhumpf 4 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    When people wonder if vinyl records are better, they are wondering if, for the SAME MIX, which they should buy: a CD or a Vinyl Record?
    I feel that there are problems with the explanation given, i.e.:
    - First, a thing to consider: each time you listen to your vinyl record, the quality decreases due to wear. Physics.
    - We have a limited hearing range (~20-20K), so how about the 192k files?
    - "Compression" can mean many things in this field: dynamic range compression? how about lossless compression? or lossy compression?
    - How do you think your 192k hi-fi music will do through 50-17K freq range speakers?!
    These points are not bonus material, but very important topics which needed to be addressed.
    Digital is a much superior format due to many advantages. And you say that "it depends how the music was mixed", but if you want to compare "apples to apples", the answer should suffice the question: "for the SAME MIX, which I should buy: a CD or a Vinyl Record?"

  • @EddieJazzFan
    @EddieJazzFan 4 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    One thing missing from this discussion is longevity. In a safe place, suppose you put a vinyl record on a shelf along side a reel-tape, a CD and a hard drive. Come back in 100 years. The ONLY format that will be viable will be the vinyl record!

  • @lorigetz4489
    @lorigetz4489 4 ปีที่แล้ว +5

    Amen Amen Amen......thank you Paul. I’m a vinyl guy myself but agree with you 100%

  • @jpdj2715
    @jpdj2715 4 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    44.1 kHz - can we agree this is a misnomer? it is 22.05 kHz per channel and these are written alternatingly. The sum frequency is 44.1. It's like a sine wave with an up and a down part. That sine wave's frequency is 22.05 kHz, using a half sine for left and the other for right. We end up with 44.1k digital 16 bit samples, but go back to the 22.05 in DA conversion.

  • @MrPeeBeeDeeBee
    @MrPeeBeeDeeBee 4 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    Nicely explained Paul...... and I do agree. Now vinyl mastered from digital recordings? There's a headache.

    • @Mooseman327
      @Mooseman327 3 ปีที่แล้ว

      Yeah, that's just the worst of both worlds.

  • @chrisrainbow2393
    @chrisrainbow2393 4 ปีที่แล้ว

    Anything is good as long as you like it.
    There is always a danger of listening to your equipment rather than enjoying the sound.
    Vinyl CD or whatever, enjoy your listening experience is my motto.

  • @genez429
    @genez429 4 ปีที่แล้ว +4

    I grew up in the 60's as a musician. Analog was the common mode. Digital was yet a dream. Analog had a way to smooth out the bumps and pits in what real live music sounds like. Being a musician, I was always frustrated as to getting certain instruments to sound like the real thing. Analog (to me) homogenized the sound. It was a smoother than real life sound. When I began listening to digital I was hearing real instrument sound for the first time. Having performed as a musician I knew that what I was hearing was much closer to the real thing.. warts and all.. Digital in its early days had its own worms to work out in its implementation. But, there is so much fine detail missing with analog. Some prefer the simpler sound of analog because its not realism they seek. I have heard some excellent analog. But people forget that lots of analog can sound like crap in its own way. I can achieve a sense of realism with digital that was impossible with analog. Yet? Taste and preferences is the name of the game.

  • @rickc661
    @rickc661 4 ปีที่แล้ว

    I pretty much agree, it's the actual recording process. ( maybe, see pt. 3 ) Now, do the major companies have any incentive to upgrade their recording setups - heck, has Sony studios ( I believe they have actual artists signed ) upgraded THEIR setup to SACD standards ?
    What about movies, isn't current blue ray audio 'the best' , how do they handle the actual recordings ?
    third - I think You can actually see a difference when simply up formatting a standard DVD to HDMI. ( 480 to 720 or 1080 ) and that is strictly in the on the shelf equipment. would that not also be true for the much simpler audio info stream ?

  • @justanotheryoutubeuser5029
    @justanotheryoutubeuser5029 4 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    This is what i always say to people. You can have a dsd128 that sounds worse than a 16/44.1. BUT if all things are constant, only the recording is the variable, yes dsd will outperform any flac.
    Its just sonically better.

  • @gummball
    @gummball 4 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    Which sounds better - Van Halen at 16bit or me at 192bit?

  • @richsherman3673
    @richsherman3673 3 ปีที่แล้ว

    I have always been predictably turned off by the statement "CD's sound better than records", since the year 1982 when I first enjoyed the sound of first generation CD's and the absolute convenience of the new format. Blanket statements are rarely based on Science, Technology and Sound. Blanket statements also break the rules of logic across any field, artistic, scientific, political or social. Paul has made, in this video one of the most important proclamations I have ever heard in my entire Engineering career: "Lets not confuse the Facts of Technology", holy mooolyyyyy, wow. The proof of this, is readily found across the dozens of Audio Forums.... where we can read from plenty of generally "well meaning enthusiasts" with absolutely "Zero Technological Basis", expressing 'opinions', and often, with a touch of Hate. Thank you Paul as this whole narrative of this vs. that has been finally and succinctly de-bunked. As Paul Klipsch had a small Lapel Pin that we can all google what it said. My pro-bono website is an oasis of truth and experience, not the angry audio thought police ready to slay Giants with Keyboards and and opinions. This wonderful hobby is all about "the love of Music", so just enjoy it from an Edson Cylinder, 78rpm Shellac Records, Cassettes, 44.1, 192, all the way up to the Master Streams available today. PS Audio is dedicated to the highest standards of Technology so I suggest that all Haters learn to Play an Instrument so they can experience what real sound does to the soul and mind. Thank you Paul another Home Run.

  • @QoraxAudio
    @QoraxAudio 4 ปีที่แล้ว

    But Paul, when are you going to design your own PSaudio turntable?

  • @Noone-of-your-Business
    @Noone-of-your-Business 4 ปีที่แล้ว

    1:30 - I think by "compression", the text did not refer to dynamic compression, but to *bandwidth* compression, most notably _lossy_ compression, like MP3 or WMA.
    Well then: 1) which technology has got the highest _potential_ quality and 2) how often do media for this format usually _reach_ that full potential? After all, we are discussing the overall everyday experience here, not some academic exceptions.
    Also, I _have_ done cross checks of 16/44.1 to 32/192 and I personally was _not_ able to tell the difference in a blind test. I *_was,_* on the other hand, able to tell a subtle, but noticeable difference between uncompressed WAV and highest resolution MP3. I *_also_* found out that the "enhancer" function on my Yamaha receiver reconstructs the lost high frequency material so faithfully to the original that I was unable to tell the difference between uncompressed WAV and enhanced MP3. These are the relevant results to me, and with all due respect, I have come to consider anything more hair splitting than this to be snake oil. I have yet to hear the difference that you talk about.

  • @schmoab
    @schmoab 3 ปีที่แล้ว +4

    Analog is the way to listen for collectors and album lovers. It’s a very tangible medium, which adds to the “fun factor.” It certainly doesn’t sound better, but can be fun to listen to for some types of music.

  • @suprgx472
    @suprgx472 3 ปีที่แล้ว

    One of the best sounding pieces of music I have is a 24 bit 192 digital file of the eagles hotel California.
    I mean it's perfect. The base is strong and tight, lead and background vocals are right where they should be very prominent in the sound stage. All instruments clearly defined. Then I have other HD downloads that aren't that great at all.

  • @catchall673
    @catchall673 4 ปีที่แล้ว

    It seems in every field where consumers are involved there is a small percentage of folks who become more interested in the gear than in the actual activity - cars, model trains, guitars, music, etc. At some point they actually go from being focused on the enjoyment of the subject to being focused on the production of it. It is up to the individual to pursue what they find most enjoyable. Who am I to tell someone else what they should enjoy?

  • @angrykermit3192
    @angrykermit3192 4 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    Thank you for all the points in this video. I've been a DJ for 35 years and if I hear one more person use the blanket statement "vinyl sounds better than digital" I'm going to choke slam them lol.

    • @vaughntonkin539
      @vaughntonkin539 4 ปีที่แล้ว

      Vinyl is better than digital

    • @junkyard3924
      @junkyard3924 3 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@vaughntonkin539 He’s gonna chock slam you

  • @MrAMF50
    @MrAMF50 4 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    This question begs to be asked of you. All variables being equal which format is the most pleasurable listening experience? For me its vinyl.

  • @willieluncheonette5843
    @willieluncheonette5843 4 ปีที่แล้ว

    good presentation

  • @robertsparkman8516
    @robertsparkman8516 4 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    Yep!

  • @benpit2762
    @benpit2762 4 ปีที่แล้ว

    Fully agree Paul!

  • @mikechivy
    @mikechivy 2 ปีที่แล้ว

    This guy has seen and heard it all. He's a massive fan of both mediums, so I have faith he's put in his time. Love that he's subjective about everything. Breath of fresh air. My 2 cents if anyone cares. I had a Rega Planar 3 (2016) with an ortofon black. It was good. Never felt it bested digital. I recently got a Planar 10 with and Apheta 3, and 8/10 times its better than digital. Not sure if its coloration or what, but its better on my ears. Sure it cost me a TON of money to get there, but its incredible. Not advocating spending that much, just thought id chime in and say Vinyl CAN sound better.

  • @SwoOopy
    @SwoOopy 2 ปีที่แล้ว

    4:20 kudos Paul.