This kills me...


So, I get all into with this new singer / songwriter fellow and download a couple of mp3's from his website and spend a couple of weeks playing them entirely too much at work every day on the old office computer. Obsession ensues. Finally, I manage to order a copy of the CD from him (one of those small-time, not-in-stores deals), get it home to the trusty hi-fi, and go straight to the favorite track. Lo and behold, they had gone and snuck in a whole drum section and a relatively complex baseline that the mp3 and office speakers just plain weren’t up for. It was fine, sure, maybe even better, but not the track I had fallen for (so I became obsessed with a couple I didn’t have at work, no problem). How do you like that, though, betrayed by the resolution and fidelity of my own system. Sure, it was a prime example of the "I've never heard that before" syndrome that we all enjoy so, but I was actually disappointed. Just goes to show, the magic (when and if magic) is all about the software, not the hardware. Sobering, really. Am I alone on this one?
mezmo
I listen to my clock radio when I go to sleep and sometimes I'll hear something and think, damn that sounds pretty good. So I'll try to remeber the song so I can hear it later. 9 times out of 10 it sounds like complete garbage on the good system. Maybe the inaccuracies of the cheap radio hide the shortcomings of the poor music?! Doesn't make sense.
That's pretty ironic. It's sorta the online version of a disappointment I've faced frequently since I started buying music. It always sucks when I see/hear a great band live and buy their CD based on the performance. Then I listen to it and think "Who the hell is this? It doesn't sound like the band I saw." I've good quite a few of those in my collection. They're sorta like a blurry picture I have of my deceased Grandma--it helps remind me of, but I can really tell what she looked like any more.
Eldon, I think the experience you relate is also largely due to the removal of the visual cues you enjoyed while seeing the music performed live. With all that lighting and stage production going on, to say nothing of the performers' theatrics, it's easy to get sucked into the visuals, while you fail to notice that the sound is fairly crappy.