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ArbitersGround wrote:>Music forum. One guy on here who has some type of connection (that nobody really knows about or talks about) with the band of said forum.
>Claims band plans to release an album next year.
>Album comes out many years later.
>People state "See I bet you feel silly, those who doubted him."
>Dude sends the guy a message asking about vinyl represses.
>He replies "I dunno lol it could happen."
>Dude comes back saying "Holy fuck, he just confirmed without any shadow of a doubt that there WILL BE VINYL REPRESSES. We are as sure as the earth revolves around the sun."
Seriously, I'm not saying there won't be vinyl represses. But you guys don't understand the meaning of the word "confirmation."
Anon1339 wrote:Noob question here...can somebody tell me why it is better to listen on vinyl as apposed to a 320kbps mps or flac. Is it really that much better or is it a collector thing? If it is better it would be something I would be interested in. What would be a good vinyl player and would I need a preamp?
Anon1339 wrote:Thanks, polar sky!Very nice and simple explanation for choosing vinyl. Do you have any recommendations for equipment? The headphones I currently own are AKG k240 mkii and Beyerdynamic dt770 if that makes any difference.
Anon1339 wrote:Noob question here...can somebody tell me why it is better to listen on vinyl as apposed to a 320kbps mps or flac. Is it really that much better or is it a collector thing? If it is better it would be something I would be interested in. What would be a good vinyl player and would I need a preamp?
Magrathea wrote:ok I read the whole explanation above re: Analog vs Digital (confirmed what I thought I knew)
However how are we sure that the final mix is in analog? I mean the brothers usually work with analog all the time, and I expect that TH is no difference, but once it is mastered and all, isn't it done in digital format or is the mastering also done analog?
So are we sure it's AAD (for CD) and AAA for vinyl? because if it's AD and the vinyl, what gives?
jcotteri wrote:re-phaelam-ed wrote:mono wrote:noby wrote:Aerial Boundaries wrote:I think the frustration people are expressing with the represses simply comes from the fact that they paid a lot of money for something they love. I would feel like a bit of a muppet if I had spent £500 or however much for my collection, then to realise that kind of money is no longer necessary.
My main problem stems from the fact that I don't think people care about original pressings enough in general. But hey, now we're entering to the realm of pure subjectivity...
People do care about original pressings, or maybe not original but at least old, now that people like 4Men or Rhino are pressing reprints from digital masters. But luckily these old pressings (Wire, New Order, etc.) are usually not too rare or expensive.
a lot of time represses are lower quality. perhaps not on the vinyl side, but generally the packaging.
sucks getting lower grade vinyl too. geo seems like its on 180g vinyl. SOLID...nice. i got in a beautiful, thin shitty vinyl. plays like crap and has a pink chip in it. probably scrap from another press of something that jumped into the pressing. got lucky and found a white label promo copy. 180g...FLAT and awesome sounding.
there CAN be value in a first pressing. dont discount it. but if they repress...dont pass it up. may not happen again.
I think you have no idea what you are talking about, the weight of the vinyl has nothing to do with the quality of the sound or the pressing, the only difference is that it's more likely to be virgin vinyl rather than recycled
In fact you will more than likely find that represses have higher quality sound in general, as they are likely remastered and probably have more cash flow with the time that has elapsed.
polar sky wrote:Magrathea wrote:ok I read the whole explanation above re: Analog vs Digital (confirmed what I thought I knew)
However how are we sure that the final mix is in analog? I mean the brothers usually work with analog all the time, and I expect that TH is no difference, but once it is mastered and all, isn't it done in digital format or is the mastering also done analog?
So are we sure it's AAD (for CD) and AAA for vinyl? because if it's AD and the vinyl, what gives?
Unfortunately I think most albums these days are mastered digitally and then pressed on vinyl (Not 100% on that). That's why I was surprised when MBV announced their vinyl would be mixed and mastered strictly in analog and then pressed.
Some info on AAA:
http://darkermydudes.blogspot.com/2010/ ... in-uk.html
So I guess if you record, mix and master all of your music on your computer, it makes no sense to press it on vinyl.
harpoon dodger wrote:polar sky wrote:Magrathea wrote:ok I read the whole explanation above re: Analog vs Digital (confirmed what I thought I knew)
However how are we sure that the final mix is in analog? I mean the brothers usually work with analog all the time, and I expect that TH is no difference, but once it is mastered and all, isn't it done in digital format or is the mastering also done analog?
So are we sure it's AAD (for CD) and AAA for vinyl? because if it's AD and the vinyl, what gives?
Unfortunately I think most albums these days are mastered digitally and then pressed on vinyl (Not 100% on that). That's why I was surprised when MBV announced their vinyl would be mixed and mastered strictly in analog and then pressed.
Some info on AAA:
http://darkermydudes.blogspot.com/2010/ ... in-uk.html
So I guess if you record, mix and master all of your music on your computer, it makes no sense to press it on vinyl.
It's possible MBV mixed it all down to an lacquer acetate, then recorded it back for the digital master...by doing this, your record will sound identical on CD or vinyl, apparently. Arcade Fire did it on their last record. Makes sense to me?
re-phaelam-ed wrote:harpoon dodger wrote:polar sky wrote:Magrathea wrote:ok I read the whole explanation above re: Analog vs Digital (confirmed what I thought I knew)
However how are we sure that the final mix is in analog? I mean the brothers usually work with analog all the time, and I expect that TH is no difference, but once it is mastered and all, isn't it done in digital format or is the mastering also done analog?
So are we sure it's AAD (for CD) and AAA for vinyl? because if it's AD and the vinyl, what gives?
Unfortunately I think most albums these days are mastered digitally and then pressed on vinyl (Not 100% on that). That's why I was surprised when MBV announced their vinyl would be mixed and mastered strictly in analog and then pressed.
Some info on AAA:
http://darkermydudes.blogspot.com/2010/ ... in-uk.html
So I guess if you record, mix and master all of your music on your computer, it makes no sense to press it on vinyl.
It's possible MBV mixed it all down to an lacquer acetate, then recorded it back for the digital master...by doing this, your record will sound identical on CD or vinyl, apparently. Arcade Fire did it on their last record. Makes sense to me?
you just use one of these...
then transfer from tape...like they used to
kelp wrote:http://www.amazon.co.uk/Perfecting-Sound-Forever-Story-Recorded/dp/1847081401/ref=sr_1_1?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1369843479&sr=1-1&keywords=perfect+sound+forever
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