Who has tried "TIDAL" vs other streaming applications?


Hello, I'm new to Audiogon, this is my first posting into Forums.

I enjoy streaming audio from my PC and have been using Spotify for a number of years now (college student discount to premium $5 a month). I just recently stumbled upon a App called TIDAL, that streams Lossless 16/44.1FLAC with their "HI-FI" subscription (Student $10 a month). Since I can queue up Spotify and Tidal at the same time, I was able to do an A/B and used Dire Straits Brothers in Arms. I noticed that TIDAL indeed sounds better to me but am convinced none of my family members could tell a difference. I then did an A/B with TIDAL and the actual Brothers in Arms CD, to my surprise TIDAL sounded scary close, if not just as good as the CD! This is hard for me to believe, I think I'm just trying to justify the extra cost of TIDAL on a crazy tight student budget, maybe its a placebo effect? I need to drop one of the services, but which one? I would appreciate your thoughts please... Thank you!
My system:
PC = Gaming Rig I built myself, using dedicated high quality audio card.
Krell KAV 400xi integrated
Sonus Faber Electa's with Sunfire HRS Sub
Cambridge AZUR 840C CDP/DAC
Luxman T117 Tuner
Sony SCD - C2000ES SACD Player
Kimber Silver Streak throughout  


grm

Showing 1 response by sbank

"to be honest most music doesn’t even benefit from lossless to much if at all over full bitrate mp3." 

What kind of system are you listening to when you draw this conclusion? 

I agree that IT'S ALL IN THE PROVENANCE as to what recordings really sound great,  but find that most mp3s fall short on even moderately well setup modest systems. The only times the better formats aren't noticeable is on overly-produced compressed pop and similar recordings that were mixed and mastered with iPods in mind; often with auto-tuned vocals to make it even worse.
There's plenty of great sounding red-book out there, sounding good when ripped in lossless aiff or wav, but mp3s of the same will sound compressed, undynamic and full of glare. Cheers,
Spencer