SACD?????


I've noticed that sacd availability doesw not seem to be increasing. If anything, there are less titles out there now. Is this format not going to take hold??? Should I not get a Sony 9000es and put my money into a different dvd player???

Thanks
jdcmac12
Sorry Guys, I should have posted this link with my message.
Check it out!

http://www.hdcd.com/
I have a Marantz SA-1 player. It palys great regular cds and incredible super audio cds. Marantz stopped making it because I heard the costs were too great. Buy one and it will give you years of enjoyment.
I have both SACD (a Sony SCD-1) and DVD-A (Pioneer 38A) and both have their strenghts and weaknesses. Well recorded SACD's are very good -- in same league as the best vinyl, poor recordings or remasters are no better than Redbook and certainly inferior to any vinyl. DVD-A is quite an experience, and althought the "high endness" may not be up to SACD, I do enjoy multichannel "fun" on occassion. Same problem as with SACD though -- many of the recordings are abysmal. And with only 50 titles, the pickings are certainly slim. SACD has about 350 titles, but how much Miles Davis can anyone really take? So now I find myself peppering my "audophile" recordings with off-the-shelf Redbook.

I also agree with poster who likes XRCD -- these are quite good, and certainly more consistient in quality than the SACDs and DVD-A's. Between my SACDs, DVD-A, XRCDs and even DTS 5.1 multichannel, I'm never bored. And I can't even pick a favorite -- it's the diversity that I actually enjoy. I'll reserve further judgement on any of this until I get a the EMC-1 with 192 upsampling and the Sony 555 multichannel SACD.

Oh sh$%@t, no more room to put all this stuff -- I need to buy another rack. "Honey, the left rack balances the right rack, don't you think". Somehow, I'll have to come up with a better line. --Lorne
When you look at the numbers, it is hard to believe that SACD will make it into the mainstream. According to TAS there are about 100,000 serious audiophiles out there. There are at least 50 million cd players being used right now. It is hard to believe that with only 100,000 serious users that would be enough to make SACD mainstream. To the vast majority of music listeners, they just will not be able to here the benefits. A lot of audiophiles are just going to buy better redbook cd players like the Meridian . 508.24 or the Ayre D-l or the new 24 bit EMCl and enjoy their existing cd collection. These players, although somewhat pricey, are almost as good as SACD and you can play your entire cd collection.