Madman! Digital vs Vinyl


Anyone out there who has a great vinyl setup and a great digital setup, try this!

Bring up Elton John’s Tumbleweed Connection Deluxe Edition on Qubuz for digital which includes Madman Across the Water and play it.

 

Then pull out your vinyl of Madman Across the Water and play it.  
 

Please tell me which sounds better on your system and what you have for TT, cartridge and phono preamp.

 

 I won’t bias the results by telling you what I think.

 

 Thanks 

dougthebiker

OP: “Given that the age of the vinyl stamper impacts the SQ of a given copy of an LP significantly, wouldn’t it be true that if you stick with a single digital source, e.g., Qobuz…. ”


That is just one variable. Old albums can be remastered a number of times, or not mastered but produced from a secondary transfer as master. It is extremely complicated as to what you get.

On the other hand, in general if you double the cost of your system all the recording sound MUCH better making typical recording variance less important. So, it is a matter of proportional differences.

Also, when your only source of music had to be purchased… at a high cost per unit (I remember only being able to purchase one album every few months, or none) you tend to be really careful what you buy. Also, exposure only came from radio and friends. This tends to force drilling to find the very best music and recording and listen to it over and over. But in the digital world, you can sample tons of stuff… and follow interests. Don’t like the album you found, for whatever reason… move on.

Also, the catalogues are only going to get more robust. I am sure different mastering are in the future of streaming and more and more obscure stuff. So, to me, this still points to digital as the future. Although I have enjoyed the hundreds of spectacular vinyl recodings I have, some original and many audiophile.

 

 

 

For as many cd’s or streamed content you show me, I can show you just as many vinyl Lp’s that will sound better. It is in the pressing. Some sound like utter garbage, others will make your head spin played on a good set up. I have yet to hear any digital content that possesses that "tubey magic" that some, not all, Lp’s have.

I find it's highly dependent on the source.  Some streams I listen to have virtually no dynamic range.  They're mastered to be loud, not to sound good.  Others can be stunning.

 

Same with vinyl, everything depends on the pressing, and dead wax info isn't always the complete answer either.  I have a few same matrix pressings that sound a bit different too.

 

I have some really great sounding vinyl of Bill Evans, albeit not the original LPs...likely remastered and I do prefer the vinyl over the CDs I have of the same stuff.

I’ve concluded this.  It all depends on how the source was recorded and you need to spend a lot more on your vinyl rig to exceed digital results.  That said I prefer well recorded vinyl!  My vinyl rig is VPI HW-40, Pass x-27, Van Dre Hul Stradivarius.  Digital is Denafrips Terminator Plus w/ Gaia.