HDtrack not necessarily better?


Im curious if anyone else has had this experience with HD tracks. The Eagles album "Hotel California" is an album I've loved since I first heard it in the late 70s playing on a Myer Emco floor system and heard countless times since on multiple systems. It's not a sonic spectacular but the midrange vocals, guitar just take me back to times past. I tend to use it as first pass to judge midrange harmonic integrity.
Recently I purchased the hi rez 192khz PC version and settled in with high hopes of hearing improvement and details that a CD rip didn't provide. What I got was top and bottom octave improvement but in the midrange the album became polite vs harmonically satisfying. My guess so far is that the DVD source (per downloaded artwork) used was a different mix from CD and that somone focused on a multichannel experience failing to do justice to a 2 channel listener recording. I've had this experience before with audio DVD.... would really not like to spend money on indifferently mixed 2 channel sound.

Thoughts? has anyone else experienced same? any good review reference points so that one can be sure the high rez download version doesn't disappoint?
128x128davide256
I have to disagree. A friend of mine downloaded the hi-rez version of Hotel California and I was blown away. It's so much more natural sounding that I can't even listen to my cd anymore. And I have the dcc gold version disc.
I'm with Dookiedan on this one. I thought "Hotel California" was one of their better quality releases.

With God as my witness, I don't want to appear rude....but...

what is the difference between "polite vs harmonically satisfying"?

Maybe the artist were in a "polite" mood when they recorded this back in '79.
How are you playing it back? Are you sure you are really getting full resolution?
I have found HDtracks to be consistently on par with the best that is out there. In some cases you are simply getting the same master that was sold on two channel DVD Audio or two channel SACD but I have not yet found anything to complain about. In some cases you are getting better than the best out there. Tom Petty Hi-res albums on HD tracks are a new high watermark for TP recordings that were already generally A+ quality to begin with.

You may need to recalibrate or take a hard look at your system.
I can't speak to your specific recording, but I know that sometimes better doesn't sound better because it's just different than what we want to hear. It may grow on you over time and eventually be your favorite version.

Analogy: Nobody can make certain things better than you mom does, even Gordon Ramsey. Is mom's really better, often times not, it's just not what you're conditioned to enjoy.
can't agree. am yet to buy anything from hdtracks that doesn't sound "as good" or "better" then the redbook versions. most have been "better" with only a handful being "as good" or nearly the same. all of the "as good" versions have been 96 or 88. most of the 88 and 96 have sounded "better" as well with only a few falling into the "as good" category. every 176 and 192 has sounded better with most putting the redbook versions to shame imho.

just my 2 cents...now on sale for a penny.
A lot of HDTracks titles are just upconverted 44.1 sources according to discussions on Steve Hoffman forums, you have to careful.