It is true case of "tail wagging the dog" if you only buy CDs because they sound good on your system, personally I don't care for most of the Cds mentioned by others here. Over half my CD collection is rock/alt which are not audiophile recordings, and to make them sound good you need a good DAC that removes distortion and has high quality filter, and also nuetral cables/interconnects that do not over emphasize upper mids and treble, among other things. I think many make the mistake of tuning their system to sound great with a handful of audiophile recordings, and sound terrible with average recordings, this is the opposite of my approach.
Do I have to buy all new CDs?
OK, I know the question is fecetious, But I ffel like my collection of over 300 CDs went down to about 10 that still seem worth listening to. I am new to the audiophile game, so I started with Martin Logan SL-3s and a Sunfire amp. I guess I just didn't believe how revealing they really would be. I should have guessed when I immediately realized the differences in recording quality on the two Clapton CDs I use to audition speakers. This thread has become a complaint. For future reference is there any way to identify high quality recordings before I buy?
- ...
- 18 posts total
- 18 posts total