Streaming vs traditional


My son is talking about the "lossless" audio one can stream.  I have a good collection of CD's as well as a couple of TT and LP's with more than than I should invested in both.  (some may say too much, some may say not enough)  Anyway, thought I would come to a relative neutral forum to ask for reviews on the streaming audio.  It kinda reminds me of the Bluray and Betamax wars of years past-no standard version/format yet.  I guess it's relatively in it's infancy with lots of software and format devices on the market.  I love the convenience of CD's and the warmth and ambience of analog.  So-what's up with the streamers?
handymann
I could not live without streaming. From being able to listen to great radio stations like Jazz.FM  from all over the world to having all of my music at the touch of a button or browser.

I buy CD's, but I cannot remember the last time I spun one. I don't even have a disk player attached to my DAC.

Tidal is available now on most streamers and has an AMAZING old school catalog. From Chet Baker to Prince, Led Zeppelin, completely worthwhile.

The newest streamers and DAC's have much better clocks than they did 15 years ago. The biggest gripe I have is software and Android compatibility.  For these reasons I am loathe to give up my Logitech Squeezebox Touch as the streaming infrastructure here.

Best,


E
Should also point out, with exceptions like DSD and https://referencerecordings.com/

it is very difficult to get high resolution music files. You are stuck with Redbook.  Truth be told though, modern (< 5 years) DAC's sound phenomenal with Redbook now.

Also, a plug for Blue Coast Records :

http://bluecoastrecords.com/

Best,

Erik
Like others I can hear no difference between identical files either from a CD or server or streaming. Provided you have good gear it should reliably play an identical file with the same quality whether it was from a CD, a sever or over the Internet.

I highly recommend Tidal for its excellent catalog and CD and greater quality of resolution.

I recommend Roon as the best interface for access and bit perfect playback of your music collection - it works seamlessly with Tidal
I think it is useful to distinguish between two kinds. The first is streaming from your own hardisk. This was the common way to do this: you rip (i.e. copy) your cds to you rown harddisk, or you buy downloads, and then access those from a device. The other is streaming from the internet, from services like Spotify, Tidal or Qobuz. If the latter are also full cd red book (losslessly compressed in e.g. FLAC) they will sound identical to cd's.  For now, Spotify only does 320 kbs (lightly) compressed, but Qobuz and Tidal also offer full red book cd quality. Whether you can hear the difference is a matter for debate (BBC research believe you cannot, and I am inclined to believe them). Anyhow, more bandwidth uses a lot more energy, and hence produces more pollution. However, in the footsteps of Qobuz and Tidal even Spotify is about to introduce full red book cd streams. My own preference is for streaming with a Chromecast Audio.
Despite denials, there are many multichannel hi-rez downloads but it depends on genre.  There are more real (from hi-res original recordings and not up-mixed) multichannel hi-res files in classical.