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This is the second Archived Forum which was active between 1st March 2012 and 23rd February 2022

 

Tidal experience

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This post has 8 Replies | 2 Followers

Esax
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Esax Posted: Thu, Aug 1 2019 7:28 PM
Got my self tidal. Is a little disappointed. Not many songs that are master. In addition, the master plays the songs in significantly higher volume. Today when I used tidal, the volume suddenly dropped. Switched to apple music and it became normal again. Someone who has experienced similar?

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koning
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koning replied on Fri, Aug 2 2019 5:45 PM

The best sounding streaming provider is Qobuz.

That was the conclusion of a dutch audio review web site.

 

https://audio-creative.nl/muziekstreaming/tidal-vs-qobuz/

 

Esax
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Esax replied on Fri, Aug 2 2019 6:24 PM
I know. But you can not get it in sweden.

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Jaffrey2230
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To be honest, I tried a number of services  and now use Apple Music and Sirius XM mainly because of the curated content and overall software experience. My experience is that I can’t hear the difference even with very high end systems (not mine) so I am lucky. So I based my selection of service based on available content and software experience. I like Spotify too, but since I am in Apple ecosystem I picked Apple and with Apple Match uploaded all my CDs to iCloud.

I haven’t tried Qobuz but in the US the consensus is that Tidal and Amazon HD sound better and have an overall bigger library but Qobuz has more high res tracks.

My 2 cents worth 🙂

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seethroughyou
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I’ve compared Deezer Hifi (16/44.1 cd quality) versus CD and most of the time (60-70%), the CD sounds noticeably better when A/B comparisons are done. I could swear Deezer are doing something to degrade the CD-quality file before streaming it.

.

 

 

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moxxey
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moxxey replied on Mon, Aug 31 2020 3:42 PM

koning:

The best sounding streaming provider is Qobuz.

I've been testing Qobuz recently and comparing against the highest-grade Spotify stream.

You can tell a difference. High hat sounds are more distinct and bass more rounded. I'd say about 20% more substantial.

But, really, the difference is fairly marginal (for me) on most modern music or certainly it's not enough for me to pay another £22/month to stream Qobuz over the convenience of Qobuz.

For me, Spotify is just so convenient and fully supports things like CarPlay. I know Qobuz supports CarPlay, but only in 'offline mode' and for this you have to be an even higher premium or you just get MP3 downloads.

MaxH
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MaxH replied on Mon, Aug 31 2020 4:58 PM

Agreed. Qobuz is the best in my opinion but its UI is not as good as Tidal and its catalogue is not so extensive.

I think you will find you pay £15 p.m. for the top service and can also download to play in offline mode at 24-bit Hi-Res up to 192 kHz although I have never used CarPlay.

 

 

oli
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oli replied on Mon, Aug 31 2020 5:15 PM

There is differences between the different music providers, at the same quality level or for HIRES files, tiny, but they are there listening on good equipment. I do prefer the Tidal sound over Qobuz (have been a long time Qobuz customer), more round, more analogic I would say. Qobuz is more clinical to me. But well, again, the difference is tiny and probably impossible to distinguish on most of equipment and ears.

 

But for cars...?!... come on... Who cares listening anything else than MP3 with the disturbing sound coming form the tyres on the road, the engine and the wind ?? Even on the 1000W - 15 speakers B&O system installed in my very well isolated Aston Martin, outside with the engine off, I can't notice any difference. 

MaxH
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MaxH replied on Mon, Aug 31 2020 5:29 PM

Just checked and it is more expensive to stream Hi Res to mobile phone networks although via Wi-Fi it is £14.99 p.m.

I also do a lot of headphone listening and (IMHO) the difference in sound between 'normal' streaming and Qobuz and Tidal is quite marked. 

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