
Originally Posted by
jkelman
Well, since I guess I entered audiophile territory this year with my new system (though I still don't think of myself as one), I would have to counter that. I don't have vinyl, other than those for which I wrote liners....and I never listen to them. I listen to CDs but have been increasingly moving towards higher res, whether it be SACD, Blu Ray or in downloadable form when available. Of course, you need to check the source first, but vinyl has no appeal to me. And when learned that many of today's vinyl reissues are being cut from MP3s? Well, that just cemented my position.
I don't have a 5.1 setup (yet, anyway) because I blew all I had (and went over budget to boot) on the player (OPPO), the amplifier (Leama) and the speakers (Tetra...incredible speakers) and I couldn't afford to go further. But I am enjoying the new stereo mixes in high res that invariably accompany the surround mixes.
And I've nothing against surround; I just can't afford it at this time....
But it is always approved by the artist who made the original release. And if you think that all those albums back in the day that you hold dear were released in mixes and masters that always made the artists happy, think again. More often than you might expect, because they were dealing with major labels and release schedules, artists were forced to rush these things and so the original album may be sacred to you...but it ain't to them. Fripp hated Lizard. Now, with Wilson's new mix, he likes it. That's the best endorsement Steven needs or can get.
And it's unfair to paint those of us who like his new mixes (or Jakko Jakszyk's, for that matter) as "genuflecting at the altar"). I happen to like their work, but with almost every instance of a remix that they have done, the original mix is also available in the package, so you get the best of both. If the remix is not to your liking, you can get a non-brickwalled, oftentimes flat transfer of the original mix, and oftentimes in higher resolution. How can that be a problem?
But there are some albums where these guys really have cleared things up: with Jakszyk's (as he calls it) alternate mix of THRAK,you can delineate the musicians far more clearly and so, the guy I always felt was overlooked in that group - Trey Gunn - can now be heard properly, so his contributions to the band are now more clear. Again, how can that be a problem?
Having heard some surround mixes outside my home, though, I'd say that when done right it is absolutely NOT a gimmick. When done wrong it sure can be, but the immersive experience of some of the new surround mixes is pretty darn compelling. Heck, we listen to films in surround when we go to a theatre; why is it such a gimmick to mix albums for the same immersive experience...as long as it's done with discretion and taste?
There is a way to upsample...has been done when the original multitrack tapes were not available (Devil's Triangle, for example, on Wilson's new mix of Crimson's In the Wake of Poseidon)...but I don't believe that, the way a hi def tv up-samples lower res material, the same is true for putting s CD on a surround sound system. I could be wrong...but I wouldn't want a faux surround sound mix anyway, unless, as was the case with ITWOP, it had to be done in order to present the entire album in surround.
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