I also disagree with the OP.
I have experimented with upsampling. I had the Chord DAVE with Blu 2 and then M Scaler. Upsampling to 768k initially sounded impressive but over time it came to sound unnatural and fatiguing. The sound was more detailed, but it was artificial detail - lean, skeletal and unnatural. It was also bright and tonally bleached. It’s the sort of thing that impresses in a short demo but ultimately sounds unnatural and artificial.
I sold the DAVE and upscaler and now have the Lumin X1, which can stream 768k files. So i tested the 768 upsampling in Roon. It had exactly the same effect - more apparent detail, but lean, bright, bleached and fatiguing.
Playing files at their native resolution - or with minimal upsampling - sounds best to me - fuller, warmer and more natural. All the detail is there, it just isn’t emphasised in a grossly unnatural manner.
The analogy with video images is a false one - the two work very differently.
There are no free lunches in audio or anything else. Adding digital information to a file may produce some benefits but as always there must be a cost somewhere. In my view that cost - the unnatural, artificial, fatiguing sound - far outweighs the miniscule benefits.
I have experimented with upsampling. I had the Chord DAVE with Blu 2 and then M Scaler. Upsampling to 768k initially sounded impressive but over time it came to sound unnatural and fatiguing. The sound was more detailed, but it was artificial detail - lean, skeletal and unnatural. It was also bright and tonally bleached. It’s the sort of thing that impresses in a short demo but ultimately sounds unnatural and artificial.
I sold the DAVE and upscaler and now have the Lumin X1, which can stream 768k files. So i tested the 768 upsampling in Roon. It had exactly the same effect - more apparent detail, but lean, bright, bleached and fatiguing.
Playing files at their native resolution - or with minimal upsampling - sounds best to me - fuller, warmer and more natural. All the detail is there, it just isn’t emphasised in a grossly unnatural manner.
The analogy with video images is a false one - the two work very differently.
There are no free lunches in audio or anything else. Adding digital information to a file may produce some benefits but as always there must be a cost somewhere. In my view that cost - the unnatural, artificial, fatiguing sound - far outweighs the miniscule benefits.