guitarsam; If you'll promise to start using caps, I'll give it a shot..
I promise.... I 'm not picky, either..
It sure makes for a hard read.
Regards
I promise.... I 'm not picky, either..
It sure makes for a hard read.
Regards
if i encode digital audio with vinyl frequencies will i have digital vinyl ?
@guitarsam wrote: i haven't owned a turntable in 20 years however listening to a vinyl rip i realized how superior the sound is to digital to my ears. and if i could convert digital audio to sound more like vinyl that would be a great compromise between the two formats.And then the two samples you provided are recordings from roughly 50 years ago. I'd suggest you consider the following: fads and fashion change for recording styles just as they do for clothing, hair, music, furniture and almost everything else in life. In the recording studio, the choice of microphones used, their placement, the studio acoustics and treatment, the mixing console and so on have changed over the years. Likewise, the recording engineer and producer's choices when mixing down and adding special effects reflect the fads and fashions of the time when the recording was made. Then the final mix needs to be remastered for the commercial manufacture of the recording -- vinyl mastering has a different set of limitations and considerations than what is done for CD/digital releases. A lot of old rock material that is re-released on CD is often processed to bring the sound more in line with today's fads and fashions. There are endless ways to do this with all of the toys available in the digital realm. I think I said this before in another of the threads you started, but it never surprises me when the commercial CD release of an album has a different overall sound quality than the vinyl release, especially if one is comparing the original LP to a later and remastered reissue. Likewise, I am also not surprised that, if you convert your own LPs to digital, those recordings become almost impossible to differentiate between. |
Sam the first link doesn’t work the second one does. The second file sounds good, I’m just using a laptop, tube headphone amp as a preamp, a class d 2.1 and a couple old RS4b It is a quality playback I must admit.. So you went from a LP that was digitally remastered, and recorded it? The recording you did is a digital file in flac format. Then you play an LP at the same time? I don’t get that part, what you’re doing. Playing both at the same time. It sounds that way to me.. Don’t be like me and use a 1000 words to explain "NO it won’t work" lol Explain to this old fart, a little slower, if you don’t mind.. I have to go wind up the Victrola, it’s running a little slow. Regards |
Sam here with an update.You don't need to do a re-encode, Step (1) Play a digital rip of a vinyl song on your computer, Or play a vinyl song, on your turntable. With or without volume/ Step (2) While the vinyl is playing, Take a digital album on your computer and copy and paste, Making a second copy of the folder, Which takes about 5 seconds. Now A/B the original and the copy of the same digital album And the copy will sound like the vinyl |
same here. I respect that djones51 hears no difference, However in blind a/b testing i'm hitting 100% everytime This is the vintage vinyl hi-res song i'm using if you don't have one. Just play in background while making a copy of digital song or album and the copy will sound like vinyl. http://u.pc.cd/QzrctalK |
Ya know, I think I'll stick with vinyl, when I want to listen to vinyl. I don't listen to a lot, but, then I use to be a strict Reel to Reel guy. My wife is the vinyl person.. I just listen when she's qued up.. I like CDs, streaming and a server.. just easy.. She'll wash and get them just right.. lot of work, old vinyl, Sure sounds good. Regards |