Stream vs digital download


Has anyone compared a stream to a purchased download? Lets say a purchased 24/96 flac recording from somewhere like acoustic sounds compared to the same exact 24/96 stream from Qobuz? I am really enjoying my Innuos Zen mkIII. I am finding that I like my ripped CD better than the same album streamed on Qobuz. I purchased a couple DSD's that phenomenal like Norah Jones, Elton John Madman across the water is exceptional. But I was wonder for some newer albums that I really like but don't own the CD, is it maybe better to just buy the digital download. I mean its only $18 for a flac so not much to lose, but I was curious what others thought. Maybe its just having the music playing from a local hard drive in the Innuos that makes it sound better than streaming. Just curious what others have found as I am still new to streaming.
jmphotography

Showing 1 response by bgoeller

Yes. But only one album: Cava Menzies & Nick Phillips 'Moment to Moment' (which I greatly enjoy btw).

I have streamed this via the Tidal App but also own the 24/96 download from Blue Coast Records, the only format available for download.

In my system the download is clearly better. But so what. I wouldn't suggest anyone make a decision based on anything but experimenting in their own system.

The biggest digital domain improvement by FAR for me was upgrading my CD player to a Modwright Sony 999es. Since then the only digital files I download are DSD with provenance, meaning mixed direct to DSD from the console or from the tape master. This is really limited to Native DSD and Blue Coast Records, but both DSD256 & 512 formats sound stunning.

The next step down is SACD in the Modwright Sony, and the delta is very small. Redbook in that CDP is a larger step, but is still WAY better than ripped and streaming, with streaming being at the very bottom of the list.

My overall point being that I prefer buying, holding and playing CDs, so I worked to make that as enjoyable as I could in my budget. If streaming is your lifestyle choice then focus on setting your system up to optimize that. I don't think there is an absolute and system-independent answer to whether ripped CDs a stream sounds better.