Have a hi-fi? Does it work?
as a part-time DJ, I learned that analog transcriptions
always sound smoother than CDs. . record a CD on tape
and it sounds better (using the right EQ compensation),
so do you have and enjoy records, these days? -- j
.
always sound smoother than CDs. . record a CD on tape
and it sounds better (using the right EQ compensation),
so do you have and enjoy records, these days? -- j
.
I've heard and read the "experts" who say the human ear is not capable of discerning the difference between mono and stereo below such-and-such frequency, but I call bunk. I do most of my high-volume listening in the car - because... neighbors - and there is no comparison, sonically, between the "subwoofer" that's built into my new car's system (Bose or not,) and the great old 2-way speaker systems I cycled through during the '70s and '80s, all with full stereo from top to bottom of the frequency range.
The best car stereo I ever had was a brother's hand-me-down under-dash Sanyo cassette deck, I think with something like 12W/channel power, a $100 five-band graphic equalizer with 30W/channel boost, and a massive pair of EPI M120B bookshelf speakers, laying on their backs in the hatch of my '73 Plymouth Duster. They were 2-way speakers with 8-inch woofers, heavy-duty particle board cabinets that weighed upwards of 30 lb. apiece, and they sounded glorious.
Currently the only manufacturer I know that still makes (or recently made) bookshelf speakers with 8-inch woofers is Klipsch. At some point I plan on snagging a pair of those, a pair of good, clean high-powered amplifiers, finding a good, competent car audio installer and having that setup installed in parallel to the factory Bose system, with some kind of toggle to switch it over. It means the loss of significant cargo space in the hatch and the need to get a rear deck fabricated from some kind of acoustically-transparent mesh, but... I've had it up to my ears - literally - with the muddy, one-size-fits-all overbearing thump of the mono "subwoofer."
As for home audio, there are a few albums that never made it to CD and never will (untimely record company demises, simple obscurity, etc.,) so at some point I'll have to spring for an LP-to-digital turntable/encoder. What's kept me from getting one already is the fact that nobody has come close to manufacturing one that encodes at a bitrate anywhere near the resolution of a CD. And I do not want to hear the refrain "Oh, the human ear can't tell the difference anyway." Not an acceptable answer, thanks.
I suppose I could try getting an amplifier for my classic pre-digital turntable, but every time I look into that I wade into a swamp of technical complexity I am not willing to drain.
[D'OH! 'Scuse the book...]
pre-amp and a Hafler amp (remember Dynaco?) driving a pair
of British Leak transmissionline speakers each with a 15 inch
bass, an 8 inch lower-mid, a 3-inch upper-mid and a ribbon
tweeter from Wharfedale can prove what you're saying about
stereo bass. . I have even been able to transcribe LPs to Nakamichi-
quality cassettes so that the fidelity was sustained. . (just
set a couple of switches on the Nakamichi "wrong.")
so. . for your car. . as in transmissionline speakers, the
rear baffles behind bass speakers in their boxes are essential.
you can mount speakers in the corners of a car with heavy
damping felt behind them and get good bass. . or, you can
buy the bookshelf speakers -- Celestion, Spendor, Infinity
if they're still in business -- and use them. . otherwise, it's
blocking off corners I guess.
I am starting to explore the use of a Roland SD-2u recorder
which will take RCA-plug line-level inputs and make an SD-card
copy of an LP or tape or CD or live music or whatever ...
which you can move from there to the hard drive on
your computer. . and then, you can put it on CD. . so radical.
as for Klipsch, I will have to check them out. . their big
speakers use metal horns, which drives me away.
Good Luck To You, and happy listening!!! -- john
.
In The Beginning 2:04
Lovely to See You 2:34
Dear Diary 3:56
Send Me No Wine 2:21
To Share Our Love 2:53
So Deep Within You 3:10
Never Comes the Day 4:40
Lazy Day 2:43
Are You Sitting Comfortably 3:30
The Dream 0:58
Have You Heard (Part 1) 1:28
The Voyage 4:10
Have You Heard (Part 2) 2:27
-- j
.
After doing my research properly, I find the correct album is "In Search of the Lost Chord".
Good Boy Deserves Favour -- "the story in your eyes."
they did some great stuff. . we saw them here when they
had the traveling clamshell show. -- j
.