George,
I've done some experiments with this. I've compared CDs from my collection that I've ripped to Tidal's version of the same recording. I've figured out a way to download from Tidal, then I look at the DRs calculated when I import the Tidal rip into JRiver. In most cases, you're right that Tidal tends to have a recent remaster, or lately, an MQA version only....if you search by artist. But if you search by album name, I've found as many as 6 versions of the same recording, and these are mostly all different. This is a laborious process, but if I find this, I download all 6, listen to each, then compare the DR values. Usually I wind up marking the version with the highest DR and I stream that one from now on. I also look at the files in Audacity to see which have clipped peaks, and which don't. I haven't found a faster way yet to do this. Some of the DR results are wildly different.
Dave
I've done some experiments with this. I've compared CDs from my collection that I've ripped to Tidal's version of the same recording. I've figured out a way to download from Tidal, then I look at the DRs calculated when I import the Tidal rip into JRiver. In most cases, you're right that Tidal tends to have a recent remaster, or lately, an MQA version only....if you search by artist. But if you search by album name, I've found as many as 6 versions of the same recording, and these are mostly all different. This is a laborious process, but if I find this, I download all 6, listen to each, then compare the DR values. Usually I wind up marking the version with the highest DR and I stream that one from now on. I also look at the files in Audacity to see which have clipped peaks, and which don't. I haven't found a faster way yet to do this. Some of the DR results are wildly different.
Dave