Linked by Thom Holwerda on Fri 23rd May 2008 13:02 UTC
Multimedia, AV Many of us grew up with the idea of the component audio system. A receiver (or a separate preamplifier and amplifier), tuner (radio), record player, tape deck, and later on a CD player. If you were into more fancy stuff, you had a DAT or MiniDisc deck as well. While some of us cling on to this mindset like there's no tomorrow, the real world seems to favour a different method of consuming music. According to Erica Ogg (what's in a name), the component audio system is on its way out - thanks to the iPod and the commoditisation of music.
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It's digital anyway
by chmeee on Fri 23rd May 2008 17:56 UTC
chmeee
Member since:
2006-01-10

Most new recordings, even on vinyl, are recorded digitally, then transferred to vinyl, so they sound virtually identical to CDs, maybe even worse, since CDs can be digitally enhanced, while the vinyl must go through the A-D conversion before being enhanced.

Older recordings, on the other hand -- those done before the 1990's, will sound better as vinyl, as long as you buy originals, and not remasters. Remasters have been sitting on a digital shelf, and have been recopied to vinyl, so are digital anyway, and probably lost a lot of their original sound properties in that process. Still, older vinyl beats newer CDs any day simply because of the music on them -- the new stuff is just plain crap, the older stuff is golden.