So...I've been reviewing my CD collection in light of listening to DVD-A and Blu-ray audio and, I've basically reached a point where I'm playing what I guess is a game (?) that I'm unofficially calling "Can it reach 60" (if you want to try it, your volume settings will be particular to your receiver/amp; for me the watershed point is 60, yours I should imagine will almost certainly differ).
The rules are pretty simple: I play the CD I'm "road-testing" with the volume set at 50 and I slowly increase the volume until the tinny, treble makes it unlistenable and prevents me from increasing the volume any further.
A good example is the Pixies Debut album, Come on Pilgrim from the Minotaur box set: it has Come on Pilgrim on CD, DVD-A & Blu-ray. The CD (2.1) and DVD-A (5.1) mixes of Come On Pilgrim can't hit 60 before the treble collapses (or probably more accurately amasses or accumulates) into a distorted trebly mess...
...however, the Blu-ray mix of, Come On Pilgrim (5.1) can be pushed past 60 without the higher frequencies collapsing into a mass of tinny treble and the mix can be played at a high enough volume to bring out the full nuance and color of the music.
Although that's the closest I can currently get to an apples to apples comparison, I'm noticing this trend with the majority of my CD's, I'm not able turn them up loud enough to hear the detail and nuance of the mix because the treble collapses into a tinny mess.
I'm wondering if better speakers might remedy this, but I can't think that that would be the case, as my speakers handle high resolution formats without issue and I have certain CD-based mixes that they can render excellently.
The Come on Pilgrim comparison: 2.1 CD, 5.1 DVD-A & 5.1 Blu-ray audio (with only the Blu-ray audio capable of remaining distinct at volumes higher than the watershed point for most of the CD's in my collection) seem to suggest it's the lower-res CD format that's to blame.
I'm also wondering if paid-for downloadable files are any better, or if stuff is just generally produced low-res enough to fit on a CD, with those files then offered for download.
My guess is that it probably differs from artist to artist, with newer artists, who produce specifically for paid download and who don't have to work within those file-size/resolution restrictions, potentially producing higher resolution files?...with older music, that's not been remastered in higher-resolution for download offering no improvement over CD.
I'm only just starting to explore this stuff, so I don't know if I'm walking an already well-trodden path here...?...but I'm going to start a move over to downloadable files from places like Amazon and Band camp, so I'll be able to make some comparisons, but in the meantime, I'm wondering what light other forum members might be able to shed on this topic?
The rules are pretty simple: I play the CD I'm "road-testing" with the volume set at 50 and I slowly increase the volume until the tinny, treble makes it unlistenable and prevents me from increasing the volume any further.
A good example is the Pixies Debut album, Come on Pilgrim from the Minotaur box set: it has Come on Pilgrim on CD, DVD-A & Blu-ray. The CD (2.1) and DVD-A (5.1) mixes of Come On Pilgrim can't hit 60 before the treble collapses (or probably more accurately amasses or accumulates) into a distorted trebly mess...
...however, the Blu-ray mix of, Come On Pilgrim (5.1) can be pushed past 60 without the higher frequencies collapsing into a mass of tinny treble and the mix can be played at a high enough volume to bring out the full nuance and color of the music.
Although that's the closest I can currently get to an apples to apples comparison, I'm noticing this trend with the majority of my CD's, I'm not able turn them up loud enough to hear the detail and nuance of the mix because the treble collapses into a tinny mess.
I'm wondering if better speakers might remedy this, but I can't think that that would be the case, as my speakers handle high resolution formats without issue and I have certain CD-based mixes that they can render excellently.
The Come on Pilgrim comparison: 2.1 CD, 5.1 DVD-A & 5.1 Blu-ray audio (with only the Blu-ray audio capable of remaining distinct at volumes higher than the watershed point for most of the CD's in my collection) seem to suggest it's the lower-res CD format that's to blame.
I'm also wondering if paid-for downloadable files are any better, or if stuff is just generally produced low-res enough to fit on a CD, with those files then offered for download.
My guess is that it probably differs from artist to artist, with newer artists, who produce specifically for paid download and who don't have to work within those file-size/resolution restrictions, potentially producing higher resolution files?...with older music, that's not been remastered in higher-resolution for download offering no improvement over CD.
I'm only just starting to explore this stuff, so I don't know if I'm walking an already well-trodden path here...?...but I'm going to start a move over to downloadable files from places like Amazon and Band camp, so I'll be able to make some comparisons, but in the meantime, I'm wondering what light other forum members might be able to shed on this topic?
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