I've been perusing the net (largely for fun but also because I am just getting back into vinyl and just bought a new turntable and amp) for articles that discuss CD vs vinyl. There are a ton of them out there, and largely what I am getting is that digital is still superior, people are getting false hopes on how good vinyl is supposed be giving the big resurgence, vinyl's dynamic range is not as wide, etc etc. Stuff like this:
https://darko.audio/2016/07/the-inco...h-about-vinyl/
So I felt like I had to do an experiment of my own for no other reason than to see what (if any difference) I can hear - or not. I love A/Bing stuff anyway so its fun for me. I am a trained orchestral musician (an orchestra teacher for 23 years now, going on 24 in September) and I also have a jazz quartet, etc so listening is essentially what I do for a living.
I compared Planxty "The Little Drummer" from Cold Blow in the Rainy Night (1974). I own both the CD and an original mint vinyl pressing from 1974. The tune is 3:19, and basically has one male vocalist (center), acoustic guitar right channel, Irish bouzouki left channel, and Irish tin whistle sort of off-center on occasion. I used my Audio-Technica ATH-M50x headphones (decent but not high-end audiophile level phones) via my Rogue's headphone amp for both the CD and vinyl.
I started with the CD twice through:
The vocals had a bit of "distortion" almost all the way through. The string instruments were present in both channels but it was difficult to pick up what the guitar in the right channel was doing at some points. The left channel bouzouki had more clarity for sure but not a lot of "weight" in the articulations with the pick. The biggest culprit of all was the tin whistle...almost painful it was so bright and honestly not very enjoyable. The recording was very clean (no background noise) and relatively warm.
I then did the vinyl twice:
Immediately the vocals were clearer. Both the guitar and the bouzouki were clearer as well and I could actually focus in on the right channel guitar much easier. The bouzouki had a hefty quality in the articulation that was clearly missing from the CD version. Truly stunning in the differences there. The biggest culprit before, the tine whistle, never annoyed me and sat in the picture beautifully balanced. The overall picture was just a smoothness, balance, and richness that the CD did not have. I truly couldn't believe the difference.
I then went back and did each one 2 more times. A total of 8 listens of this tune. I came to the same conclusion each time. Vinyl the clear winner - or at least the one I would easily choose if I could only have one for the rest of my life. I am in no way a CD/digital hater....I own over 2,500 CDs and it has been my number one musical media for most of my life. Yes, this was one tune from one album, but I cut my teeth on the CD version of this album. The vinyl was a revelation. So I was saying to myself - OK - I am using a 20+ year old CD player with a 20+year old built in DAC, bit then I also thought - OK - the record from 1974, which is almost 50 years old(!) was the clear choice here. In that respect I almost felt like CD had failed me in a way. I obviously love CDs and continue to listen to them, now along with vinyl, and streaming....it's all important to me. But in comparing a medium in which most audio engineers say is still the best (CD/digital), to my ears it failed me in this little fun experiment. I will be doing more of this, largely for fun, but also to gain knowledge of why vinyl is still very important in 2020.
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