i thought every band puts out their stuff in vinyl
hold the bias
Thanks for the opinion. It's wrong. Guess we'll have to agree to disagree. I'm not going to argue with newbs You admit you've never heard vinyl through a good system, so hold the bias until you have all the evidence. I appreciate you and the replies you provide......keep 'em coming. We can amicably discuss most things {{}}
Quote from: Krlll Mule on April 07, 2014, 06:47:59 PM hold the bias Ironically not something one would wish to do when recording to vinyl or tape.An intriguing overview of the limitations imposed by physics on various consumer and pro analog formats:Analog "Did You Know?" (part 1)Analog "Did You Know?" (part 1)Analog "Did You Know?" (part 2)Analog "Did You Know?" (part 2)The takeaway for me is that vinyl recording/playback colors the audio a little like an Instagram filter colors a photo. But vinyl happens to produce artifacts people find pleasing to the ear (much like tube amplification vs. transistors.)
P.S. Quadz, you smart ass.... I just got the bias joke....good one.
VaeVictis:i find it funny that you even consider grammar a sign of intelligence, that itself is a very uneducated claim
With older recordings of music, which were recorded on actual tapes in studios years ago, the LPs can actually get a slightly warmer sound simply because the recording quality was pure shit back in the day in the first place. But now? With EVERYTHING being recorded with Pro Tools and being maxed out digitally in every possible way? Yeah, an LP is going to detract from the audio.
the recording quality was pure shit back in the day in the first place. But now? With EVERYTHING being recorded with Pro Tools and being maxed out digitally in every possible way?
In short, the only reason for LPs now is for DJs. Anything else is a pointless bullshit reason.