When is digital going to get the soul of music?


I have to ask this(actually, I thought I mentioned this in another thread.). It's been at least 25 years of digital. The equivalent in vinyl is 1975. I am currently listening to a pre-1975 album. It conveys the soul of music. Although digital may be more detailed, and even gives more detail than analog does(in a way), when will it convey the soul of music. This has escaped digital, as far as I can tell.
mmakshak
Robm321, I used to listen to vinyl exclusively throughout the 70's and most of the 80's and I still like the sound of it. What I didn't like is the inevitable deterioration that results from playing records. In addition, back in the heyday of vinyl, about 2/3s of the records I bought were so poorly made and exhibited so much surface noise, ticks and pops, excessive warpage and harshness that they were nearly unlistenable. I'm sure that whatever miniscule vinyl production is done today is done much more meticulously than it was back then but I think that deterioration is still a problem. One could argue that many CDs are unlistenable but the reasons tend to be poor recording or mastering - or possibly large amounts of jitter inherent in the pressing. Now maybe I didn't have the most state of the art playback system. My vinyl setup consisted of a Micro Seiki DD-33 turntable with a carbon graphite tonearm, a Denon MC-301 cartridge, and a DB Systems preamp with separate power supply and head amp. This is a very modest setup compared with the many thousand dollar systems that are available today. I'll also admit that I haven't heard the absolute state of the art in digital playback but I can set that my digital setup now outperforms my vinyl setup of yesteryear. My main point is that if most people believe that vinyl actually does sound better, it's not because it is more pure or provides more actual information. It's because the types of distortion it creates are complimentary to the source material.
Aplhifi, thanks for the correction, but that was fantastic Nat King Cole. I had one question, though. You showed by that direct from turntable to digital disc that it's not necessarily digial, per se, that is a problem. But I think we played a cd that had what I would call unnatural detail in their singing. With Elvis and Nat, it was a given that that was how they sounded. With the all digital cd, we heard details that almost distracted me. I'm thinking that I heard one voice where it seemed like it was coming from the left side of his throat. I'm sure that was where it was coming from, it's just not what I would expect to hear live. It can't be the recording technique after 25 years of digital, can it?
I have to mention one more thing about listening at Aplhifi. The high I get from listening to reproduced music was more pronounced and longer lasting than I get from my system. I thought maybe it was due to tubes, as Gunbei suggests. Aplhifi has a tube output, I believe, on his player and his amp has a tube input. I took a look at Aplhifi's web-site, and there might be more to it. Maybe Aplhifi can say something on this?
I seem to have it; and to make matters worse, it is from a computer based system! I know that anything I would think would be suspect; after all who hates their own work?

But I have quite a few listeners over from time to time, and they get to remark on my failures (plenty of those) as well as my successes. The remarks I am getting now all the usual superlatives but what really matters is that they wont leave!

The trick? Digital eq/xover; done well it is an amazing thing. I did try the Deqx, which is a fine product, but found it dynamically...er...off. But the vastly cheaper DBX unit captures the dynamic life of music (makes sense,perhaps, in that it is design for use in live music). Though I have tube gear (SET and OTL) SS is what rules here. Emotion is the reason for music, and it is what I have here.
Mmakshak, thank you for coming over! I have to say that your (Ori's) cables were among the best Copper cables I've heard, very nice.

The Nat King Cole was Steve Hoffman's amazing work (DCC) made from the original Analog Master Tape. It was not Reference Recordings although these are really great as well.

I would also agree with you that Analog recordings have "more soul" than all Digital ones, but again, this comes to implementation because everything starts with Analog anyway. :)

Keep in touch! May be you can come back here again, this time with Ori.

Regards,
Alex
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But, what about the soul of the music? Tvad, you have to admit that it is a catchy title? I think I evaluate reproduced music now by how it affects me after I've listened. Things like changing my mood, relaxing me, getting the serotonin going. Guidocorona, I told Aplhifi that it made me tense at first, but later that went away. It had definitely affected me positively after the listening session was done. I only heard one song comparing Oritek X-2's and Aplhifi's interconnects. I know you've heard this before, but I need more time to compare.
Sorry about the doubling of the same post. The point that Aplhifi was saying about the digital recording mechanism not being that much of a problem, might have been proven by that DVD-A disc that he recorded.
I want to apologize Aplhifi, for misspelling your name, and thanks for having me over there. I also heard that DVD-A disc that Aplhifi made, and my comment was "this sounds like analog vinyl". I did notice that the most natural sounding discs were originally recorded in analog. That would be an Elvis Pressly recording, a Nat King Cole made by Reference Recordings, plus that DVD-A Aplhifi recorded. This might be related to what Jlambrick and the guy who recommended Mapleshade's cd's were saying. C5150, this might relate to your point. Discussions are good.
I want to apologize Aplhifi, for misspelling your name, and thanks for having me over there. I also heard that DVD-A disc that Aplhifi made, and my comment was "this sounds like analog vinyl". I did notice that the most natural sounding discs were originally recorded in analog. That would be an Elvis Pressly recording, a Nat King Cole made by Reference Recordings, plus that DVD-A Aplhifi recorded. This might related to what Jlambrick and the guy who recommended Mapleshade's cd's were saying. C5150, this might relate to your point. Discussions are good.
And, if I may so ask, did you still experience 'tension' while listening to Alex's fine digital wares?
Finally, which interconnects did you enjoy best, APL's or your beloved Oritek X2s? and Why?
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I just got back from Alphifi's, and I appreciate the fact that you guys haven't actually call me a neophyte. He, and many others out there, are far, far more experienced than I am. Now, I have to say that Alphifi has made all his own equipment, including interconnects. He may be selling these interconnects. They deserve to be heard. They definitely gave me pause for thought. I do want to say to the less experienced to still trust your own ears. I also know that back in the day, that the Linn way of PRAT helped me know what to look for. Today with digital, PRAT is almost a given, but I think it helps to have some way of evaluating what is better.
C5150, I have been drinking wine since I was in the stroller, whilst growing up with Toscanini and the NBC Symphony on RCA vinyl. Today I purchase wine based solely on my personal taste and reasonable price. Call this PPr (price/performance ratio). I have also purchased my current CDp -- Teac X-01 based on the same PPR and personal taste last October. . . although my better half thinks I must have 'brilliant pebbles' for brains. In spite of her financial objections I enjoy it immensely and through it I am experieincing the 'soul of music' like never before: today it was Lara St. John on solo violin on Bach's Ciaccona in D minor in an HDCD recording, and Edgar Meyer on bowed double bass playing Bach's 5th suite for cello solo (Sony Classical SK 89183
). I am sure I would also experience music to be as solful through Vinyl, if perhaps marginally less conveniently so. Yet I have made a deliberate decision to retire my LP collection just over two decades ago in 1984 without suffering major regrets. My marriage will endure only 1 major music playback format at a time. I don't do iPods either, nor MP3 on notebooks computers, but then. . . I don't do wine coolers. Do give me a bottle of hardy California Merlot any time, chilled to 18C, or perhaps a liter of 1978 Amarone from the Cantine Sociali Di negrar. . . Alla salute!
I told you guys....logic will produce answers.....cofusion will produce .....

Everyone comes back to vinyl . cd has been taking more away then vinyl will ever get back and dvd out sells both but I-pod rules. Computor generated stuff is the rage ,but the purists know best. Confused yet....this is a #'s game and nothing to do with hi-fi. Measure and calculate all you want .it has nothing to do with this hobby. Do you guys calculate when drinking good wines. If you buy wine because the bottle is pretty then you are in the wrong game. If wine tastes like wine .....next. Then if you pick components on #s .....you need to stop calling yourself an audiophile. You are a bottle collector.

Jayctoy, I don't believe this to be true. Everyone comes back to Vinyl because $2000 vinyl carries a lot more soul of the music than usual $5000 digital does.

Regards,
Alex
Robm321, I would agree with you to the extent that the IMPLEMENTATION of Digital is clearly inferior to vinyl. Please believe me when I say that, if you need 5 things to make vinyl sounds best, you need at least 50 to make Digital sound best.

A really nice guy and also owner of $100K SOTA vinyl setup visited me at the CES show. I played 88.2KHz/24bit DVD-A for him which I have personally recorded from a $25K vinyl setup. Although the 25K vinyl can not compare with 100K vinyl, the above mentioned gentleman agreed that it was just like the actual vinyl was playing - no sign of digital. We have also A-B-ed this recording with the actual 25K vinyl setup it was recorded from. There is no difference one can hear.

I will soon visit the nice gentleman with the 100K vinyl setup and will record 96KHz/24bit DVD-A out of it. There will not be any difference on A-B test, I guarantee it. Bottom line is that whatever vinyl carries as information can be captured and reproduced with Digital without any negative artifact to the ear. Digital offers the resolution and sound quality of vinyl; it’s just that it takes a lot more with it to get it right.

Regards,
Alex
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Serus (Ori), I really hoped you can make it over tomorrow at 3PM. At this point I hope your customer Mmakshak makes it over. Since he has visited you in the past, I am sure he can give you a nice report. Please feel free to contact me at any time and schedule e visit.

I've heard about your cables. People say they are amazing. I hope Mmakshak will bring your latest tomorrow for A-B test against my ICs.

The reason I wanted you to stop by tomorrow is because I still have the re-engineered Esoteric UX-1 Universal Player. This one was supposed to be my own, but the first one I built got stolen in a DHL warehouse in Belgium (another DHL horror story), so I will need to send this one to Europe early next week. I will sure have another one, but I don't really know when. :-(....It really deserves to be heard as it does not have any signs of “Digital”.

Regards,
Alex
ok ...you know who

digital vs. analog vs solid state vs tubes vs IC's vs Kramer.

I have read and seen and heard and have been told , that a top end TT has a hard time against a top cd. we have heard some say cd tops the TT. It's been said that a 1k TT blows away a 25K cd . Now depending on the combo's and mix of prices and wires and ALL that is hi-fi ,you guys have managed to describe CONFUSION . For when a member tries to get the real deal here as far as LOGIC , there is none.

Don't get me wrong ,I'm describing All that is in this site concerning whatever you want to compare or slice and dice.

When a communication is one of logic then one finds answers to questions and can go further in producing more solution to problems. This is logic and REASON.

When a communication is based on confusion then we get this phenomenon of no reason or irrational or no answers or solutions to any problem.We cannot make any advance progress this way.

Now , if this was a confused source of information then.....1, we would have misunderstanding of the subject hi-fi...check
2. we would purchase components based on cofusion and sell it and soon after not getting the satifaction etc...check
3. with confusion our realities towards each others sounds would be ,not so real after all. and would be a source of flames ....check.

4. an audiophile would be always searching through the confusion for a better sound. This is due to confusion ...check.

5 when always faced with confusion ...unless one puts order into the FACTS ,one will always be confused ,lost and going around on a merry go round etc...check..
6 >>>>to infinity you will never resolve the problem under the cloud of confusion.
Infinity + one. When a person is selling ,buying ,cheating,attacking, misleading ,profits , shipping hassles, broken promises, . How does one trust or keep the confusion to a minimum? I'll let you write up the rest.




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"Now THAT could be interesting for you both!"

Almost "you three"...
I was supposed to be in Fremont area tomorrow but things didn't work out. I'll be interested in hearing any commencts, of course.

And yes, "serus" moniker is Ori from Oritek, before there was Oritek... It stands for SE-R-US... But then I went wild and partially converted towards the push-pull design, although my main amp is a minimalist 3 watts SE, still... I can hear Alex laughing... :-)
Jlambrick. Digital is clearly inferior at this point.

Anyone who doesn't see that has never actually had a well set up TT, or is burrying their head in the sand.

But of course it's all subjective for those that want it to be.
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I'm a little late in joining this discussion but I think what Onhwy61 said about distortion is absolutely correct. Call it what it is. Tube equipment adds it and I suspect a piece of equipment could be designed that would emulate tape saturation and/or vinyl compression even more accurately. Perhaps a business opportunity exists here. This would not compensate for bad recording technique or bad pressings but in the case of a good CD recording, would provide what vinyl lovers would call "magic".

I can remember the digitally recorded vinyl records from the late 70's, early 80's. They seemed unbelievably good. I also have a compilation CD of Asian music where I swear that one of the tracks came from vinyl. It has the sound of vinyl complete with the ticks and the sense of space and immersion is undeniable. I will agree that vinyl does offer a very pleasant listening experience but I would dispute the assertion that digital is an inferior medium.
It turns out that Aplhifi lives less than one mile from me, and I will be bringing over the Oritek X-1's and X-2's for an audition on Saturday.
Yes. Philnyc. I listen to his recording in my car and agree that Robert Johnson has the soul thing down no matter what you listen to him on.
Well the best argument I can think of is the fact that analog is still around. It's inconvenient, you need more components. You have to search hard for records without scratches, there's too much to go into just to get things right. CD you pop them in.

So, if digital could match it, there wouldn't be any TT's except for maybe the stuborn die hards. I hope that one day it can, so that I can stop buying record cleaner and stop replacing my cartridges.

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I haven't read this whole thread, so forgive me if this has already been said...but I believe the soul of the music is in the performance, not in the playback format...even listening to an old Robert Johnson recording on AM radio sounds soulful to me... ;-)
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I want to defend Tvad here. First, he posts a lot. Second, I believe that he gets more out of posts on audiogon than almost anyone. That is why, I believe, that he is insistent on people posting properly. I also suspect that he might actually be a well-respected reviewer for an audiophile publication(or should be). Also, a very interesting post, Jaybo.
the last decade has brought about 'serious' advances in the remastering and manufacturing of the compact disc. the reality on the hardware side is that (unfortunately)the players(at any price) cannot perform miracles with the thousands of poorly made discs that are out there. the cosmetics and the exotic materials that we audiophiles love have pushed the envelope and the price on the hardware side into the abyss. many of the early players are nearly as refined(soundwise) as many of the 5-figured 'newer' front ends, when used with more recent cd production efforts. to this day, any workhorse turntable with a decent arm and cartridge will push more emotion through a stereo system than any digital front-end. our want for something more from our cd's will always be the subject of debate, and the money 'down-the-drain' in search for hardware, will find many of us running in circles for a few more years, anyway.
Serus and Mmakshak, you're so close as I am in Fremont, CA.

Would you please pay me a visit with any cables or electronics (cost no object) you might possibly have, so we can end the

"When is digital going to get the soul of music?"

subject once and forever?

Regards,
Alex
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That other thing mentioned was " the original multi-MB sampling rate of Sony hi-res format(SDS) was found by TAS to be superior to analog".
I just wanted to mention a few things here about digital. One well-respected reviewer says that he has "a 1985 chip, no oversampling, no digital filter, and a proprietary tube-based, re-construction filter at the end. I know that someone here recommended oversampling. Someone else said that advances in the last 4-5 years have elevated cd playback. A designer said that DSP corrections are where it's at. There was one other thing mentioned, but I think it might have to do with what Meitner does(I can't find it.)? Any further thoughts?
Tvad: "Mmakshak" is a paying customer. I often invite local customers over to listen and compare their cables to mine. I appreciate a word of mouth, but I don't ask anybody to post anything. In this particular case, to post a lot...
If you ever get to know Mmakshak, you are surely to find that he is a very enthusiastic person... At this point, I think he has said just about all he can or should say about his relationship with Oritek Audio: a local paying customer.
If you are local, drop me a line too and come over to listen for yourself. You don't have to buy anything, but you do have to bring an interesting set of cables, or an amp maybe... That is my "fee"...
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If you experiment with speakers, you can get pretty close to it now.

I think speakers are the most vital part of the chain.

I am listening to old JBL Lancer speakers with Alnico woofers, and sansui receiver - with a sony CD player, and the sound is enjoyable.

Sometimes it brings tears to my eyes and that's good enough for me...

I believe in alnico !
Plato, I am still waiting on your response. You really helped me with the Signal Cable Silver Resolutions for the Nuforce. I trust what you say.
"The old interminable and unresolvable LP versus digital car stereo argument." Lkdog, that's great! I didn't chose to put the forum here. Maybe the use of the word digital caused it to be put here?
Let me disclose my personal relationship with Ori of Oritek Audio. I went to his house to purchase a pair of X-1's. I spent 3 hours listening to his system while waiting out rush hour. I then emailed him a bit, mostly criticizing his X-1's in my system. This turned out to be interaction problems with my Signal Cable Silver Resolution interconnects. He emailed me, saying if you want your PRAT, my X-2's have it. I went to buy them, and spent about 2 hours listening to his system while having my Nuforce's updated. I've emailed him since, raving about their sound. Is that a personal relationship?
What I meant Boa2 was that the top ten interconnects were going to heavily favor older ones that have been superceded recently. I wanted to give a balance to someone who might use the answers for a purchase decision.
I guess these discussions must get personal? Boa2, I like how you signed yours with Aires. It seems like if one doesn't like the message, we kill the messenger? I'm not sure I'm putting out a message. I also think that it's about time a discussion like this takes place.
Hmmm...
Odd thread that won't die here.
The old interminable and unresolvable LP versus digital car stereo argument. :)

FWIW, I have an Ecilpse car stereo CD player with Ecilpse separates.
Sounds fanastic.
I have a decent turntable front end which I truly enjoy.
I have a nice digital source I also really like.
I have a 20 Gig IPOD with wonderful 15$ Koss KSC 35
headphones which sounds great.
In the end it is about the music to me. All of the above do a great job.

If you truly dislike digital as a medium, then move along as there is another forum called Analog that might suit you better.
We here on the Digital forum generally enjoy digital.
If you are trolling, then you have wasted enough bandwidth for one thread.
Good luck.