Posted on Dec 30 2023 11:41 PM
I probably have a couple of hundred vinyl albums, which are rarely, very rarely so much as looked at. I did buy two N.O.S. vinyl albums, a few years back, but that was only because they were never released on CD, at least to the best of my ability to find, so I bought a USB turntable, and ripped these to digital form.
Mastering an album for vinyl has different requirements than mastering for digital media. Every media form has its own characteristics, and vinyl has less dynamic range capability than a CD. I’ve heard that a bass line that would be a breeze for a CD could make the needle jump right off of a vinyl album. This wasn’t read on one nut case blog, but I’ve come across this information in several places. As I understand it, mastering for vinyl requires more compression than mastering for digital media, such as CDs.
All analog media has its own dynamic range, and even CDs have limits, but the limits of CDs are fairly high, and quite well known. 45s, LPs, and the various forms of tape each have their own limitations. “Pushing” magnetic tape is a well known technique, using the limitations of the tape as a method of compression. I’ve even done it myself, back in the Cassette days, when I would push the level slightly into the red zone on the VU meters, when creating a cassette version of a CD, for in car listening. The result was pleasantly compressed.
Ears like compression. The response curve of our hearing flattens with increased volume, which is why louder music appeals to many people. Vinyl albums are compressed, and likely EQ’d differently from CDs, and that is pleasing to the ear. I fully understand why people prefer vinyl, but I wonder if most music consumers understand why they prefer vinyl. IMHO, it’s all about the EQ and the mastering, which is imposed by the limitations of vinyl, but not directly caused by the vinyl, itself.
The article talks about outrageous prices for vinyl, and how that has affected sales. Wow! You’d think that all of the businessmen in that industry would understand that raising prices will almost always reduce sales. And Taylor Swift, as the growth area in vinyl makes little sense to me. As the article said, most Taylor Swift fans probably don’t have turntables. I guess that the emotion of a concert will make you spend money on things you’ll never use.
as far as cassettes are concerned, I used them for years. The limited sonic capabilities of 1/4” tape are multitude, but I heard some great sounds come out of tape players in my cars. All that having been said, the drawbacks to cassettes are numerous. Dolby helped to rein in tape hiss, but cassettes are still nowhere near to being as clean as digital media. Cassettes are serial access, instead of random access. Cassettes required to be manually turned over, or could be auto reversing. There was usually some blank space at the end of at least one side of a cassette, and when I created cassettes from CDs. I had to calculate how to program songs in order to fill the cassette, without chopping the end off of any songs. There were a lot of hassles. In contrast, I still have a very small iPod somewhere, about 1.25” square, and it holds more music than many impressive cassette collections.
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The artist formerly known as: Synchro
When Surf Guitar is outlawed only outlaws will play Surf Guitar.