@bkeske
Cowboy Junkies – The Trinity Session is a digital recording. Surely there was a DAC somewhere in the process of producing the vinyl, that would have provided the same profound immersion, etc., as you found in the lp. That is, unless you think there was something extra added in the process of producing the vinyl that was not in the original digital R-Dat recording and that provided all that good stuff..
Apparently mastering a CD is a process where things can go wrong, or at least not very right. In that sense it is just like mastering an LP. I have experienced what you have, that is an LP clearly outperforming digital. I have also experienced the opposite.
Finally, though quality does not correlate perfectly with expense, generally speaking if you spent less on your DAC than you have spent on your turntable + arm + Cartridge + phono preamplifier it is not a fair comparison, IMO.
Cowboy Junkies – The Trinity Session is a digital recording. Surely there was a DAC somewhere in the process of producing the vinyl, that would have provided the same profound immersion, etc., as you found in the lp. That is, unless you think there was something extra added in the process of producing the vinyl that was not in the original digital R-Dat recording and that provided all that good stuff..
Apparently mastering a CD is a process where things can go wrong, or at least not very right. In that sense it is just like mastering an LP. I have experienced what you have, that is an LP clearly outperforming digital. I have also experienced the opposite.
Finally, though quality does not correlate perfectly with expense, generally speaking if you spent less on your DAC than you have spent on your turntable + arm + Cartridge + phono preamplifier it is not a fair comparison, IMO.