Compromises (recording quality)


I was wondering how others deal with the eternal problem of great music that has been poorly recorded...Do some of you specifically build your system to be as forgiving as possible, or have two different systems or what? I know you can't put garbage in and get tolerable sound out out without great sacrifices to wonderfully recorded music....or (hopefully) am I wrong?
Bob
desoto
While " you can't put garbage in and get tolerable sound out" you can balance you system so that it is not lean and critical of all recordings. Detractors call this "forgiving". I call it imperative if your taste runs to more that a handful of audiophile discs. Digital equalization can help correct frequency imbalances. Many free computer programs allow you to learn the powers and limitations of this technology before investing money.
I try to remember the really bad ones and avoid the label in the future.

Some media are simply bad, like LP's made with recycled plastic that have bits of foreign matter imbedded in them, creating noise, or like scratched CDs.

Sometimes it is the recording's engineering. Sometimes the recording studio has lousy equipment so the engineer couldn't properly hear what was happening. Sometimes the studio has good equipment, but the engineer deliberately tailored the music to boombox customers, low quality car radio customers, or some other low fi target. Sometimes the studio has good equipment, but the engineer has no actual appreciation for good sound (perhaps new to the job?).

There are also times when the music was poorly miked or performed in an inhospitable venue.

When I encounter these issues, I have to weigh them against the appeal of the composition and the artfulness of the musicians. I haven't assembled an inferior system that would mask faults while I listen. At worst, I could delegate an album to my car CD player, but I have never actually done that specifically to mask faults.
Great topic for a thread, I've dealt with this problem all my life. When I bought my first system as a teen, my goal was to build a system that allowed me to hear music at it's best.

Like you, I found that often with high end components, the sound was not satisfactory unless "audiophile" recordings were used. I hate most of those records, our group refers to them as terrific recordings of bad music :^).

It's taken me many years, but I have my system where I can play every kind of music and the sound is good. The really good stuff is beyond compare and the bad stuff is tolerable and completely enjoyable.

I think that's the best that can be achieved. The fact that a high end system can be built to play all music is a testament to the options available to us. There are many ways to get to this point, including great but forgiving speakers and great but forgiving electronics, or both.

The key is getting ultra low distortion and ultra low noise. With that as a starting point, any distortion in the recording becomes a separate entity, and something that identifies "that" recording from the others. I have LP's that are 50 years old that sound better than recordings made last year.

If a system is built just right, you can get perfect sound from perfect recordings, good sound from good recordings and acceptable (even fun) sound from poor recordings.

In my case (and for my taste), the key is first class analog, powerful tube components and extremely low distortion speakers. There are things about that combination that are pleasant to the human ear and leave headroom for bad recordings of great music.

This last Friday night our group listened for over eight hours and no audiophile LP's hit the turntable. The majority of that nights music was the blues, with much being from 1940's through 1968. We had a wonderful time and I'm still getting email from members saying how great the sound was. Oddly enough, this was a "cleansing session" from the incredible quantity of drum records, Patricia Barber and similar software that populated the rooms at RMAF.

The answer to your question is yes, it's possible to get great sound without sacrificing the quality wonderfully recorded music.
The better ones hi-fi Is the better ALL Vinyl/cd's will sound. I was not surprised at the choice of music at this years Denver hi-fi show (same as last years show) the exhibitors were playing mostly easy listening, sounds good on any system stuff like blues/jazz. I always take along cd's that I know give gear a hard time. I mainly listen to old Brit goth/Indie music and I know that they are not generally very well produced for the most part In hi-fi terms but If they sound good then the system will make well recorded stuff sound excellent. If a cd sounds poor Is it the fault of the cd or the gear It Is played through? My thoughts are the latter Is the culprit.My thoughts only.
I handle by using a second armwand and cartridge on my TT and a second cd player for the bright stuff.