Continuing with CDs?

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At the start of the pandemic, I got in the habit of wiping the outside of every CD I buy with rubbing alcohol just out of fear of infection. Obviously we now know the odds of getting COVID from touching any mail that's been sitting in your mailbox is astronomical, but the practice made me realize how filthy the jewel case of a used CD can get. I've continued the practice, and apologies for the imagery, but it never ceases to gross me out when a paper towel scrap ends up looking like a used piece of toilet paper. Also strange is when it looks like it's been handled by a coal miner. Ick.

birdistheword, Monday, 7 February 2022 05:24 (two years ago) link

I always would buy a new jewel case when purchasing a used CD at Amoeba or wherever. Transfer that puppy first thing, sitting in the car.

False Pretenses Lad (morrisp), Monday, 7 February 2022 05:36 (two years ago) link

the bummer is that jewel cases are unrecyclable by most urban facilities

assert (matttkkkk), Monday, 7 February 2022 06:12 (two years ago) link

It's a good point made above, that the CDs that you actually find in charity shops (at least here in the UK) are extremely generic.

I guess it mostly comes down to things that were popular in the 1990s and 2000s, and also a fair amount of 'landfill indie'. Examples would be:

Keane. The Corrs. Catatonia. The Thrills. The Darkness. Stereophonics. Late Madonna.

What would other names be?

In a way it all feels like a representation of the album landscape in the early days of ILM.

By extension, there's much that you *don't* typically find. Which does, in turn, suggest that CDs as such haven't lost all value; just a certain tranche of unwanted CDs have.

Roughly the same can, of course, be said about DVDs. The same period of Jennifer Aniston films is being given away, while Nouvelle Vague or Neo-Realism would never turn up in those racks.

the pinefox, Monday, 7 February 2022 13:52 (two years ago) link

I've found a lot of CD treasures at thrift stores because unlike record stores that sell used CDs, they don't tend to check them against Discogs and remove the rare ones to sell online. You can actually find something rare for $2. You just have to trawl through an ocean of crap.

Jaime Pressly and America (f. hazel), Monday, 7 February 2022 14:50 (two years ago) link

charity shops up here usually are full of take that, spice girls, steps, robbie williams, dido, corrs and other big selling stuff to kids at the time and the rest is usually dance or pop music comps. I think they keep the good stuff for places like Glasgow so they can sell them in the actual music charity shops

Pfunkboy AKA (Oor Neechy), Monday, 7 February 2022 15:37 (two years ago) link

as per the relevant thread over on SHF that i update with my weekly finds, i do pretty well re the random stuff in charity shops.
but there has been a drop in quality of finds in the last couple of years.
still, there are treats to be had.

mark e, Monday, 7 February 2022 15:55 (two years ago) link

You just have to trawl through an ocean of crap.

^^^ New board description.

Sometimes I do really well in thrift store CD shelves and can pick up 4 or 5, sometimes just one. Last couple months have been fruitless. My most-found discs lately are Natalie Merchant and Enya, both of which I actually don't mind musically but don't need to own them even at 99 cents.

Three Rings for the Elven Bishop (Dan Peterson), Monday, 7 February 2022 17:45 (two years ago) link

The initial CD release of Enya's Shepherd Moons with the original Irish-language version of Book of Days on it is worth a few dollars.

Jaime Pressly and America (f. hazel), Monday, 7 February 2022 18:41 (two years ago) link

I live in Berlin, Germany. Charity shops don't really exist here but there are a few second hand record/CD shops. I recently went to one CD shop only to find that quite a bit of its stock was on sale for €15-20 used. Maybe cashing in on the "revival".

Duke, Monday, 7 February 2022 22:38 (two years ago) link

The shop is called Silverdisc by the way, for those who are in Berlin. Near Schlesisches Tor.

Duke, Monday, 7 February 2022 22:39 (two years ago) link

In contrast, there is a shop in Wedding called Zee Dee which has decent pricing.

Duke, Monday, 7 February 2022 22:40 (two years ago) link

The shop is called Silverdisc by the way, for those who are in Berlin. Near Schlesisches Tor.

― Duke, Monday, 7 February 2022 23:39

Of course I'm not suggesting you go there. I'm suggesting you stay away, but just for info if you're curious.

Duke, Monday, 7 February 2022 22:42 (two years ago) link

€15-20 used

if they're Japanese CDs, sure

Jaime Pressly and America (f. hazel), Monday, 7 February 2022 23:15 (two years ago) link

My most-found discs lately are Natalie Merchant and Enya, both of which I actually don't mind musically but don't need to own them even at 99 cents.

It's not my particular cup of tea, but I will say that Tigerlily is one of the most beautiful sounding CDs I've ever heard, "audiophile" releases included.

assert (matttkkkk), Monday, 7 February 2022 23:56 (two years ago) link

Continuing with SACDs?

lemmy incaution (emsworth), Tuesday, 8 February 2022 03:01 (two years ago) link

I love SACD's, I wish Sony and Philips had miraculously invented and produced THAT in 1979 rather than a redbook CD.

birdistheword, Tuesday, 8 February 2022 03:07 (two years ago) link

I suddenly got curious and looked this up: here's the very first CD presented on March 8, 1979! The prototype CD player looks so anachronistic - a very '70s look for a product that wouldn't take off until the following decade.

birdistheword, Tuesday, 8 February 2022 03:11 (two years ago) link

According to Philips, the usual long-playing records and turntables will still be manufactured "in the next ten years"

False Pretenses Lad (morrisp), Tuesday, 8 February 2022 03:39 (two years ago) link

xp i have some very nice-sounding SACDs and a few where I’m hard-pressed to tell the difference from redbook

as with most formats i think the variability of the source recording is pretty key? like esp some rock records are actually pretty shabby when you put them under the audio microscope - jazz and classical generally seem to fare much better in higher def

incidentally i recently had cause to look at the most expensive copies of Scary Monsters for sale on Discogs - I know that these are probably not realistically priced items but the SACD featured quite a few times in the higher echelons (as did some cassette copies!)

lemmy incaution (emsworth), Tuesday, 8 February 2022 04:21 (two years ago) link

Absolutely. It really depends on the mastering, and unfortunately a lot can go “wrong” with SACD. One reason I was wishing we got SACD instead of CD as our first consumer digital format is that logically it would mean DSD digital tools instead of PCM - that’s a huge difference and unfortunately a lot of SACD’s have been compromised by 1) masters that were PCM at one point 2) mastering engineers who for whatever reason converted the signal to PCM (usually to use PCM tools) before converting it back to DSD 3) players that don’t play DSD and actually convert DSD signals to PCM.

birdistheword, Tuesday, 8 February 2022 04:32 (two years ago) link

any resource on figuring out which SACDs are highly regarded? i've a bob dylan boxset on SACD that sounds good to me but the vinyl also sounds good to me so I don't really have the golden ears

, Tuesday, 8 February 2022 17:31 (two years ago) link

xp tough to say, especially because it's become a niche format. The major label branches in Japan makes a lot of SACD's, but they're so expensive, I've only bought one - the Stones' Exile on Main Street - and even that's tough to find because they've done two or three SACD's exclusively in Japan alone and only one of them is sort of worth getting.

In the U.S., it's mainly MFSL. Analogue Productions and Intervention Records do only a few titles a year - maybe even just one or two at this point - so MFSL has the lion's share easy.

birdistheword, Tuesday, 8 February 2022 20:11 (two years ago) link

Even the Redbook layers of the Pixies MFSLs sound light years better than the standard CDs

assert (MatthewK), Tuesday, 8 February 2022 21:42 (two years ago) link

I also have that Dylan box (bought it on a clearance!) and it’s lovely, but I’d say the Mono box sounds equally great despite not being SACD. There’s pretty good evidence the extended upper range is inaudible to humans, and absolutely not 50somethings like me, but I’m all in favour of the format encouraging good mastering.

assert (MatthewK), Tuesday, 8 February 2022 21:46 (two years ago) link

The Dead Can Dance SACDs sound amazing, but then the CD layer of them sounds equally amazing, so presumably it's just a really outstanding remastering job?

Jaime Pressly and America (f. hazel), Wednesday, 9 February 2022 01:07 (two years ago) link

yeah i have occasionally felt a SACD might have a little something extra - better imaging or maybe some bass tone or top end magic - but it does feel like the crucial difference might just be “we paid more attention to the mastering”

i have maybe a dozen in the rock/pop area, my Japanese copy of Let It Bleed sounds pretty good - quite like the hybrid of Can’s Future Days, remember thinking Shoot Out The Lights sounded cool but not necessarily better than the vinyl

intrigued by the PiL ones, have always heard than 5.1 Avalon is very good, truly mystified as to why Hats and A Walk Across The Rooftops have never made it to SACD

lemmy incaution (emsworth), Wednesday, 9 February 2022 04:52 (two years ago) link

SACD is a interesting thing.

It's a long time since I really paid attention to all this stuff (I think I posted about SACD here about 17 years ago!) but, as I recall... sometime in the late '90s Sony decided to archive all their analogue/first-gen digital masters. 1-bit delta-sigma at 64x CD sample rate seemed like the best/simplest method for this (very easy to decimate to PCM at various sample-rates down the line). Around the same time their patents on Redbook CD lapsed. CD ripping was taking off in a big way, a worse nightmare for the music industry than home taping ever was. So here was an opportunity to introduce a "new" format, with no digital output in hardware, uncrackable copy protection, with a swathe of marketing to persuade people that the co-inventors of CD had seen the light and realised something "better" was needed.

After that it all gets a bit fuzzy... there was a Lipshitz/Vanderkooy paper that completely debunked 1-bit delta-sigma as an archival format, and some back and forth that I didn't follow. To get any kind of useable dynamic range with "true" 1-bit multi-MHz DSD, you have to aggressively noise-shape and push a load of crap into the ultrasonic frequencies. So what you're getting with DSD/SACD is a bit more dynamic range than CD over 0-20k, and then escalating amounts of uncorrelated noise way up in the inaudibles. From an engineering PoV it seems... dubious. Especially as, very soon after Sony decided to go all-in on this as the new music format (20y ago), 24/96k PCM became quite widely available. So, if your interest was avoiding severe filtering around 20-22k, and preserving ultrasonic content - on the off-chance that some people can hear / it somehow affect our perception of the lower freqs - then hi-res PCM does that, without the noise issues.

But a lot of people claim DSD has some magical "analog" qualities than PCM doesn't have (in spite of, or maybe because of the crap lurking in the HF?).

As you've all said above, it's usually a badge of quality in terms of mastering/recording. And if something is genuinely "pure" DSD, then it's probably been recorded direct to 1-bit/xxxMHz, and is likely a fantastically well-engineered live performance - cos there's almost no opportunity to edit without a round-trip through PCM.

I've heard DSD64/128/256 (many years ago off disc, and more recently through software playback), and I've heard 32/768k PCM, and it was all very nice... and I seriously doubt I could tell the difference between them, or the same dithered down to 16/44.1k, or possibly even a 320k lossy version. But my audiophile credentials were revoked long ago, so that's fine :)

(FWIW, as mentioned on another thread, I've half-convinced myself that the subtle-but-tangible benefits of CD/CD+ Qobuz I heard over 320k-Spotify were down to differences in broadcast level... seemed like Qobuz maybe don't pull down to -14LUFS like Spotify? But I wasn't remotely rigorous in my testing...)

Michael Jones, Wednesday, 9 February 2022 10:53 (two years ago) link

The one thing I've noticed about SACDs is that they are much more jog-resistant than normal CDs.

Mark G, Wednesday, 9 February 2022 12:54 (two years ago) link

Michael, don't feel bad about your credentials because nobody in the world in the 40+ years of existence of high-resolution audio has proven they can hear the difference between 16bit/44.1khz and higher resolution audio (apart from test signals with ear-damaging volumes obv)

braised cod, Wednesday, 9 February 2022 15:21 (two years ago) link

Oh, agreed... just pre-emptively excusing myself from any high-end gear or hearing acuity battle that may arise :) Solidly mid-fi, with troublesome hyperacusis in one ear, and nothing above 13.5k in either.

Lipshitz, mentioned above, was - I think - the guy who set up the famous ABX test for Ivor T of Linn back in the '80s. The one where old Ivor - emphatically anti-digital at the time - failed to reliably hear the difference between music on an LP12 through a top of the line Linn/Naim system, and the same routed through 16/44.1 ADC/DAC.

Hi-res is great for recording - I'm all for it. But as an end-product, hard to see the need.

Michael Jones, Wednesday, 9 February 2022 16:16 (two years ago) link

I just looked up hyperacusis, which I'd never heard of before. I don't think I have this particular condition myself, though I've had tons of tinnitus and self-generated white noise for years.

the pinefox, Wednesday, 9 February 2022 16:47 (two years ago) link

Self-diagnosed and likely mis-diagnosed :) A stress-related sensitivity to high frequencies; audiologist found nothing physical, but that was 10-12 years ago.

Michael Jones, Wednesday, 9 February 2022 16:55 (two years ago) link

I prefer SACD, but honestly if the difference was that vast, I would never play CD's. The differences are subtle, and if you want to run a test, the easiest way to hear it is through echo decay - that's probably the most noticeable observation anyone can make with resolution in audio, where redbook PCM doesn't preserve the decay as well. But again, resolution isn't everything. There's no point in capturing more information that a standard resolution format can grab when the same data that can be contained in both isn't mastered well. One of MFSL's infrequent SACD duds is Earth, Wind & Fire's That's The Way Of The World. It's got a painful top end, and to be fair it may be there on the master tape since it was reportedly engineered with a hot sound, but every mastering I DO like of that music doesn't have that (or perhaps smooths out the top end). I wound up ripping the redbook layer and re-EQ'ing it myself. Lower resolution sure, but I don't really notice much less enjoy the added resolution when I'm cringing non-stop at that painfully bright top end.

birdistheword, Wednesday, 9 February 2022 18:50 (two years ago) link

I’ve been interested in SACD. Apparently my Sony blu-ray player can play them but it only has an HDMI and coax out, and my AV receiver’s manual says it can do DSD, but I’m not sure if it can through the HDMI inputs. I’d need to get a disc and try, I suppose. Those Paul McGowan YouTube videos have had me intrigued for a while as he stans so hard for the format.

john shopkins (naus), Thursday, 10 February 2022 03:34 (two years ago) link

I'm in the skeptics' corner (despite owning SACDs and low-end SACD hardware) but I will say the descriptions and the marketing are extremely good at tapping into plausible-perfection territory. Is 16 bits per sample enough? 24? well how about one bit. 44kHz? 48? 96? 192? how about a million Hz, it sounds like a pure single-dimensional stream of audio. By contrast discrete multibit sampling sounds like throwing lego bricks at your eardrum. It's pure bullshit but damned if it doesn't sound like "this is what they would have done if they'd had the technology" rather than "here is a similarly flawed stab at a straightforward sampling problem, which has already been solved, but this one gives us much better DRM". As a 12 or 13 year old looking at the first CD players I imagined that the music flowed off the disc in a crystal skein of laser light which somehow went directly to my brain. I remember a friend comparing the S/N ratio of a CD player to the amp in my moderately good boombox and telling me that plugging in a CD player might destroy my system because of the extra 20dB headroom.

assert (matttkkkk), Thursday, 10 February 2022 04:38 (two years ago) link

Red book CD standard is 16 bit resolution and 44.1 kHz which by science is 96dB dynamic range in 20hz-20,000hz which encompasses human hearing range in all sane real-life scenarios. If you're skeptic you can test it yourself. Nobody in the decades of history of high resolution audio has been able to prove it is not enough.

High-res marketing plays into the plausible territory, because you can't prove someone can't hear something. It's like healing crystals and homeopathy and horse dewormers, you can't prove they don't work.

braised cod, Thursday, 10 February 2022 05:59 (two years ago) link

What's really ludicrous is when folks claim to hear a difference in hi-res audio made from sources where there were no frequencies above 20k recorded or created, because the audio hardware used was simply incapable of capturing these frequencies. I'd love to be able to sit down any of these folks for a nice double-blind ABX session with any audio material of their choice.

Sassy Boutonnière (ledriver), Thursday, 10 February 2022 06:14 (two years ago) link

I think there’s a SACD of Brothers in Arms which was recorded on some 14 bIt PCM recorder, if I recall correctly

assert (matttkkkk), Thursday, 10 February 2022 10:18 (two years ago) link

I think there’s a SACD of Brothers in Arms which was recorded on some 14 bIt PCM recorder, if I recall correctly

assert (matttkkkk), Thursday, 10 February 2022 10:48 (two years ago) link

aargh sorry

assert (matttkkkk), Thursday, 10 February 2022 10:48 (two years ago) link

There are quite a few examples of the redbook layer on hybrid SACDs being quite radically different - different mastering path, more compressed, etc; the players themselves tend to have different output levels for each source, so it becomes difficult to compare. Dark Side of the Moon is frequently cited as an example of a hybrid SACD (maybe the best selling disc of its type?) where the CD layer is worse than the commercially available CD!

There are quite a few boutique labels out there that offer hi-res samples for download, to satisfy listeners' curiosity. It's sort of interesting (sort of) to see what you get when you subtract the CD version from the ultra-hi-res. Last time I did this (a small jazz ensemble, mixing inverted 32/352k with the 16/44.1 version), what was left was a hump of LF (0-70Hz) at least -90dB down, nothing but thermal noise 70-22k (-150dB), and then the resumption of whatever ultrasonic content had been captured by the mics (or introduced as noise by the gear) around -90dB to -110dB, for the rest of the spectrum. Naturally, this sounded like complete silence, even cranked up. But if I played it through VLC (rather than Audacity), I could hear the faint shuffle of the brushed drums. I assume VLC was using the 24/44.1 Core Audio settings on the laptop, and somehow folding the ultrasonics down into the audible region. I can see how this would very undesirable with something like DSD64, cos it's not musical content up there with DSD, it's quantisation noise pushed out of band. Or, y'know, maybe not. People like vinyl ;)

Michael Jones, Thursday, 10 February 2022 11:11 (two years ago) link

it's not that hi-res magically gives you access to frequencies you wouldn't hear otherwise. it just allows you to use less abrupt filtering techniques. even the most creative filtering techniques for redbook format introduce temporal distortions in the audio spectrum (ringing, or time smear). at issue is not whether you can hear these distortions (some people can, and you can be trained to). the question is whether you can *perceive* them. do they annoy your brain, in some sense? people commonly refer to digital "fatigue," where after a while you get sick of listening. this is such a loaded topic, but there is science to back it up.

Thus Sang Freud, Thursday, 10 February 2022 11:21 (two years ago) link

bringing up MQA is almost as combustible as bringing up mask mandates, but damn the torpedoes: https://www.soundonsound.com/techniques/mqa-time-domain-accuracy-digital-audio-quality

Thus Sang Freud, Thursday, 10 February 2022 11:30 (two years ago) link

There are filtering techniques that are inaudible. Yes, fatigue and other non-quantifiable effects are perceived as real. It's the same with people who are allergic to electricity or microwaves or mobile phone signals or wi-fi signals or 5G or whatever the next technology will be. The people perceive it as real, but nobody can prove it actually exists.

braised cod, Thursday, 10 February 2022 11:43 (two years ago) link

Yep, fair enough. There are quite a few different approaches around to stop-band attenuation (you can even select different filters on some CD players) - sharp roll-off, shallow-and-early (HF roll-off), shallow-and-flat-to-20k (but some aliasing). Again, whether one can hear the effects of these different approaches is debatable. But, yes, a higher sampling rate to begin with means that the potentially problematic effects of sharp low-pass filtering are avoided.

xxp

Michael Jones, Thursday, 10 February 2022 11:47 (two years ago) link

the higher sampling is only needed for recording, though. once the filtering is done, there is zero reason for it to be there for playback. same for bit depth, 16 bit is already excessive for safe listening but it's a sane amount of overkill.

technology wise, they got everything right the first time with CDs but upper management thnakfully were too clueless to anticipate the eventual ease of making backup copies so ever since the late 90's it's been a never ending cycle of forcing not only useless but technically inferior DRM formats down consumer's throats under the guise of "better quality"

braised cod otm

chihuahuau, Thursday, 10 February 2022 14:00 (two years ago) link

the filtering i'm talking about is done on playback.

Thus Sang Freud, Thursday, 10 February 2022 14:44 (two years ago) link

i was referring to the LPF to remove frequencies above nyquist prior to ADC, that's the only place where the higher sampling rate makes sense. there's no need for sampling rates higher than 44.1/48 khz during playback, as the aliasing has already been prevented with the LPF before digitisation

the "time smearing" FUD is MQA marketing bullshit, citing MQA propaganda as evidence for redbook's inadequacies isn't going to fly.
at least DSD, hi-rez PCM and other DRM'd nonsense formats, despite the bloat and higher risk of lower fidelity playback, actually can (under ideal circumstances) work as well as redbook audio. MQA is a 100% certified scam

chihuahuau, Thursday, 10 February 2022 15:37 (two years ago) link


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