Does Anyone Think CD is Better Than Vinyl/Analog?


I am curious to know if anyone thinks the CD format (and I suppose that could include digital altogether) sounds better than vinyl and other analog formats. Who here has gone really far down both paths and can make a valid comparison? So far, I have only gone very far down the CD path and I just keep getting blown away by what the medium is capable of! I haven’t hit a wall yet. It is extremely dependent on proper setup, synergy and source material. Once you start getting those things right, the equipment gets out of the way and it can sound more fantastic than you can imagine! It’s led me to start developing a philosophy that goes something like this: Digital IS “perfect sound forever”; it’s what we do to the signal between the surface of the CD and the speaker cone that compromises it.” 
So I suppose what I’m asking for is stories from people who have explored both mediums in depth and came to the conclusion that CD has the most potential (or vice versa - that’s helpful too). And I don’t simply mean you’ve spent a lot of money on a CD player. I mean you’ve tinkered and tweaked and done actual “research in the lab,” and came back with a deep understanding of the medium and can share those experiences with others.

In my experience, the three most important things to get right are to find a good CD player (and good rarely means most expensive in my experience) and then give it clean power. In my case, I have modified my CD player to run off battery power with DC-DC regulators. The last thing that must be done right is the preamp. It’s the difference between “sounds pretty good” and “sounds dynamic and realistic.”
128x128mkgus
I think the original question was reasonable and sincere. Here's my take on the issue.

I have dived pretty deep into this rabbit hole. One of my eccentricities in this hobby is that I like to collect formats and versions of my favorite recordings. For several tities I have some or all of the following formats: regular vinyl pressing, audiophile vinyl pressing, R2R tape version (usually 7.5 ips), CD, HDCD, SACD, and BluRay. The only format I can't play is DVD-A. My system is capable of good resolution - Thiel CS6 speakers driven by Krell amplification. I have a Denon DP47F Direct Drive turntable with a Hana SL cartridge that goes through a Krell KPE phono stage. I've got 2 CD players and one DAC that will decode HDCD, another player that will do SACD, and another redbook player. The last one is a PS Audio PerfectWave II DAC and Transport which is what I listen to most of the time.

Overall I want to make the point that in my system the CD version and the vinyl version usually sound pretty close. Rarely does one "blow away" the other (they both sound really good). The sound became much more similar when I upgraded to the Hana cartridge. The cartridge I was using before had a hot top end and it sounded better on some recordings and worse on others. The Hana cartridge seems to have a very flat frequency response.

For example, I have several versions of SRV's Texas Flood including the MoFi UltraDisc One Step, Analog Productions 45 RPM pressing, Analog Productions 33 RPM pressing, regular vinyl, MoFi SACD, and regular CD. Comparing the MoFI One step to the SACD (Marantz SA 8005 player) they sound remarkably close. But to be honest the regular CD sounds pretty darn good. The version that stands out is the original vinyl which sounds inferior to the MoFi vinyl and SACD. I have dozens of titles where I have compared different formats to hear the difference. The results are not consistent. As previously mentioned the mastering on different versions can make a huge difference and easily swamps the difference between vinyl and digital. I can safely say that in my experience vinyl is not clearly superior to CD. Sometimes it's better, sometimes it's worse.

When I see someone proselytize that vinyl is absolutely superior to digital I roll my eyes. My theory is that an analog rig is tunable but a digital rig is much less so. The difference in sound between two cartridges can be magnitudes greater than the difference between two DACs. I also agree with a previous post that a vinyl playback rig incorporates significant distortions which are pleasant to the ear. Nothing wrong with that but it means that one vinyl rig may sound very different than another. I just don't trust anyone who expounds absolutes in this hobby. When somebody says tubes are always better than solid state or horns are better than cones I turn my attention elsewhere.

I have several thousand CDs and over a thousand records - many of which I don't have on CD. I don't stream except to use Spotify to try out recordings that I buy in physical format. I love my records but I have not found that my emotional response is any greater for vinyl vs. digital. Both routinely give me chills and both occasionally bring me to tears. However, that's also true for my car stereo so maybe I'm just an emotional mush brain when it comes to music.

If I went out and spent $50,000 on a vinyl rig would records always sound better than CDs played through my $8000 CD player or my $1200 SACD player? I don't know but I kind of doubt it.To answer your original question, I think the preference for vinyl over digital is personal and is wrapped up in a whole bunch of emotional baggage that we all carry. The quality of the equipment that we can buy for reasonable prices these days is incredible. There are a lot of bargains in turntables, phono preamps, and cartridges and you won't have to get a second mortgage to give it a try. You aren't going to know if you will achieve a deep seated emotional connection with vinyl records until you try it.
The cartridge I was using before had a hot top end and it sounded better on some recordings and worse on others.

Yes and it will always be this way as long as you try and stuff the square peg in the round hole.
@8th-note  

Overall I want to make the point that in my system the CD version and the vinyl version usually sound pretty close.

This could be because most of your vinyl was made from digital? I don't even bother to buy vinyl unless it was cut using the original analog master tapes.  You want to experience the source as it was created, not digitized.  If it was digitized and then put on vinyl then a record has no advantages over CD to my ears - in fact it can only be unnecessarily noisier.
@ three-easy-payments

Quite the contrary. The vast majority of records I own are completely analog. It's true that some of the newer vinyl releases were recorded digitally or a digital master was used for the vinyl production but 90% or more of my vinyl collection is way before they used anything but a tape to manufacture a vinyl record. I'm a geezer and most of my records were manufactured in the 60's through the 80's. Later stuff is mostly CD.
@8th-note Ok, gotcha....just thought I’d ask. My vinyl experience has been different than yours from the same types of pressings you listen to. As long as you have a format you’re happy with that’s all that matters.