ARCHIVED FORUM -- March 2012 to February 2022READ ONLY FORUM
This is the second Archived Forum which was active between 1st March 2012 and 23rd February 2022
BeoNut since '75
Yes, I also remember these same news from at least 10-15 years ago.
But I have one CD I have actually witnessed deteriorating; you can see it clearly with the naked eye, it starts to discolour from the outer edge just as if the layers were separating.
Ripping and backing up your CDs was a problem 20 years ago, and in 1984 it would've been next to impossible. Now it is an afternoon job, so do it whether you think it would be necessary or not.
--mika
Old recording, orginal masters have the orginal dynamic. the music is alive.More or less all the new "re-masters" are compressed to meet the higher competition in the bloody commersial radio, yes they might appear have better transperency becuase of better used A/D converters, but after the horrible compression the music is killed, to my opinionOld Cds might actually have value in the future.......
My re-capped M75 are my precious diamonds.
Isn't everyones vinyl collection dead but secretly coming back?
My first CD, Invisible Touch by Genesis that i had to save all my pocket money for to get it from the Patterson Lakes cd store is readable even though it has more scratches than the kitchen sink.
I still buy CD's (physical media) and now think twice before filling up the coffers at Apple with my music purchases.
I have 'buried' all cd's to the loft, next to my vinyl collection. Convert all my music to high resolution AIFF or FLAC files, and now only buying music from site's as HDtracks, Qobuz, Linn... Using a lot http://www.findhdmusic.com to search. I'm mostly buzzy carefully looking to buy not over-compressed recordings.
"Believe nothing you read and only half of what you see, let your ears tell you the truth."
MM
There is a tv - and there is a BV
Christian Christensen:Old recording, orginal masters have the orginal dynamic. the music is alive.
Christian Christensen:More or less all the new "re-masters" are compressed to meet the higher competition in the bloody commersial radio, yes they might appear have better transperency becuase of better used A/D converters, but after the horrible compression the music is killed, to my opinion
sadly I have to agree
Christian Christensen:Old Cds might actually have value in the future.......
like LPs