Yes, an inexpensive, well built turntable can outperform many CD players (especially the 40 or 50 I tried from it's inception to 2005). I have found that modern CD players, and; in particular, recent DACs with separate transports with well mastered CDs will sound superior to an inexpensive turntable. My reference is a souped up VPI TNT VI/modified SME IV/Benz Ruby3 versus an EAR Acute and COS Engineering D2 DAC. Now I have leveled the playing field and I get tremendous pleasure from my best records and best CDs. My ratio of great CDs versus great LPs is is higher. I have many less than spectacular LPs in my 25,000 collection whereas, especially jazz and classical, I have so many finely remastered CDs. If I were a analog novice, a good old Technics would have been better than my initial setups of a Dual 1209, an Empire, a Rotel then a Connisseur table with an Audiocraft arm. To really get into high quality analog, I purchased a VPI 19 (upgraded to a -4) with a moded SME IV arm with a Dynavector Ruby. That killed CDs in the 1980s and 1990s. By 2005, my current system made CD listening as good as LP.