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Audio Quality Lives!

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hey, the medium that increased 99% in sales in 2011 was VINYL, not CDs. So I fully expect vinyl to be part of the audiophile renaissance.

Also, beautiful sound does not have to be big. I know my sons are mightily impressed by records played through my 40 year old British monitors (8" woofer, dome tweeter, passive radiator) and my mid eighties B&K amplifier. And my eldest son is into musical instruments pretty heavily. I fully expect him to be asking me for some minitowers and a decent amp for his room in the near future.

My daughter is in her mid twenties and yes she has an iPhone full of MP3's, but surprisingly she and many of her friends are now embracing their Dad's stereo's. She came to me about 6 months ago and asked if I would help her setup a vintage stereo system complete with a turntable no less. I still had my Pioneer integrated amp from college and my brother's Dual turntable sitting on a shelf in the closet. Both needed some work, but they are now operating flawlessly. To complete her system, I purchased a new Shure cartridge and found a very nice pair of vintage AR speakers on Craig's List. She now has a collection of about 25 LP's mainly picked up in thrift stores and garage sales. After some cleaning most of them play quite well. She just recently added a CD player and is actually buying CD's again. So Ken, even though your article was somewhat tongue-in-cheek, there are signs out there that at least some young people do appreciate high fidelity sound.

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I think the problem start with the fact that we are used to noise everywhere. Especially when it comes to mobile calls.

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All of this talk about fashion ignores the real driving force behind the (likely) upcoming resurgence of sound quality: technology. When everything started to go "mobile and downloadable" in the late 90's, necessary compromises were made due to limitations in processing power, storage capacity and bandwidth. Hence, the emergence of the craptastic MP3 format and its derivatives. But we're now entering a period in which all three of those variables are becoming inexpensive commodities. So it's only a matter of time before the power of "better" once again takes hold in the audio arena and the public is given the opportunity to buy lossless formats (such as flac) directly from iTunes, Amazon, et al. And, of course, the most potent fuel for purchases of better audio equipment is the existence of better sounding audio to play on it.

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I doubt we'll see a resurgence of CD to replace downloadable music. The CD format was standardized at a time when technology imposed serious limitations. CD encodes using 16 bit samples at 44KHz and this imposes serious dynamic range limitations. Modern loss-less streams such as 24bit Ogg Vorbis at 192 KHz sampling rates sound far better on my single-ended tube amp playing through a pair of B&W monitors than CDs ever will!

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The article and posts are really should first address the fact that the consumer audio market is very segmented. To make things a simply (if somewhat crude) as possible. There are audio products for audiophiles and there are audio products for the rest of consumers (the vast majority). Sure, there are some youth who will appreciate older and better quality formats with the exception of the LP format, which is enjoying something of revival with some youth because it oozes some retro style, the vast majority will buy whatever is cheapest, most compact, and most convenient. Most youth would rather carry an iPhone or Android or iPad now and in the foreseeable future. Sound quality is the least of their concerns.

It's nice to indulge in romantic nostalgia but I doubt most old things (including CDs) will be new again. It's over-optimistic. In fact, I'm actually surprised that , you, Ken Pohlmann put out such an article. You've always took the "In with the new, out with the old" stance. What happened?

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The article and posts are really should first address the fact that the consumer audio market is very segmented. To make things a simply (if somewhat crude) as possible. There are audio products for audiophiles and there are audio products for the rest of consumers (the vast majority). Sure, there are some youth who will appreciate older and better quality formats with the exception of the LP format, which is enjoying something of revival with some youth because it oozes some retro style, the vast majority will buy whatever is cheapest, most compact, and most convenient. Most youth would rather carry an iPhone or Android or iPad now and in the foreseeable future. Sound quality is the least of their concerns.

It's nice to indulge in romantic nostalgia but I doubt most old things (including CDs) will be new again. It's over-optimistic. In fact, I'm actually surprised that , you, Ken Pohlmann put out such an article. You've always took the "In with the new, out with the old" stance. What happened?

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My daughter and granddaughter are amazed by the sound quality of my system. 20 year old B&W 804s, KEF C75s and a new Def Tech subwoofer and KEF centre channel powered by a recent-ish Denon receiver and 20 year old Adcom power amp. They love the sound but even for me this is an expensive setup cobbled together over many years.

I'm disappointed in the trend to lossy compressed everything but the cost is a factor which I'm sure weighs on young people. If my 804s' price increased in line with inflation they would cost about $4,500 Cdn today. Instead they are over $8,000. The new ones are better but not that much better.

This is an expensive but rewarding hobby. An iPod is a few hundred bucks and anyone can enjoy their tunes on it. We have the technology for amazing sound but not everyone has the cash for it.

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