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CAN TURNTABLES COPE WITH LARGE CLASSICAL WORKS
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<blockquote data-quote="Ingvar Ahlberg" data-source="post: 1110899" data-attributes="member: 15447"><p>Well, the sun rise in the east, even south of the equator, a bit strange, that is analog, that is how the world works, all sound is analog, even those created by digital instruments, all sound, all light is analog.</p><p></p><p>Thats why I think all digital recording/storage methods for music is a stupid and unneccesary detour, just like growing soy beans and then trying to make hamburgers from that is stupid, soy is soy, cows are cows.</p><p></p><p>I can see the convenience of storing as much music on a thumbnail sized chip as on 234 10" 1/4" tapes but not that that is in any way for the benefit of the music or how it sounds in Your home.</p><p></p><p>As for the original question, Yes, off course they can, even thou I gave away all my classical records around a year ago I still know that the good records, for instance the Mercury Living Precense or RCA Living Stereo records from the 60:s, some very dynamic music on those records, recorded with 2 or 3 microphones was no problem whatsoever to replay, even using a Denon DL103, without any playback distortion, and this on over 40 year old turntables, the majority of distortion on classical music on LP are created at recording, DG the worst of them all with their hundreds of microphones all over the place, (HVK recordings worst of all) and if You experience less distortion on a digital copy of the distorted LP that´s just because the digital/analog double conversion throws away/masks a very big part of the original sound of the recording (if that was analog)</p><p></p><p>Ingvar</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Ingvar Ahlberg, post: 1110899, member: 15447"] Well, the sun rise in the east, even south of the equator, a bit strange, that is analog, that is how the world works, all sound is analog, even those created by digital instruments, all sound, all light is analog. Thats why I think all digital recording/storage methods for music is a stupid and unneccesary detour, just like growing soy beans and then trying to make hamburgers from that is stupid, soy is soy, cows are cows. I can see the convenience of storing as much music on a thumbnail sized chip as on 234 10" 1/4" tapes but not that that is in any way for the benefit of the music or how it sounds in Your home. As for the original question, Yes, off course they can, even thou I gave away all my classical records around a year ago I still know that the good records, for instance the Mercury Living Precense or RCA Living Stereo records from the 60:s, some very dynamic music on those records, recorded with 2 or 3 microphones was no problem whatsoever to replay, even using a Denon DL103, without any playback distortion, and this on over 40 year old turntables, the majority of distortion on classical music on LP are created at recording, DG the worst of them all with their hundreds of microphones all over the place, (HVK recordings worst of all) and if You experience less distortion on a digital copy of the distorted LP that´s just because the digital/analog double conversion throws away/masks a very big part of the original sound of the recording (if that was analog) Ingvar [/QUOTE]
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CAN TURNTABLES COPE WITH LARGE CLASSICAL WORKS
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