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Digitising Vinyls (OT for uk.tech.digital-tv)
In article ,
Java Jive wrote: On Sun, 06 Nov 2011 21:39:25 +0000 (GMT), charles wrote: Musicality referred to the "improvements" heard by some people playing recordings on imperfect reproduction equipment As a former amateur musician and singer of many years' standing, I find your own coined meaning of the word deeply insulting. Not "my coined meaning" - but a meaning used in the 1980s when CDs (digital stuff) first turned up. I, too, am "an amateur musician of many years' standing"; I don't see the relevance. Some people actually preferred distortion in recordings since they'd become accustomed to it. They'd obviously never been to a concert hall and heard real music. -- From KT24 Using a RISC OS computer running v5.16 |
Digitising Vinyls (OT for uk.tech.digital-tv)
wertu wrote:
On 06/11/2011 21:10, David Looser wrote: wrote do you remember the term "musicality"? it seems to be relevant here. Perhaps you'd like to explain exactly how it is relevant? perhaps you'd like to **** yourself with a thermonuclear munition. Mr Wertu, you appear to be a foul-mouthed savage. Please don't drag the tone of this discussion down to your own level. Bill |
Digitising Vinyls (OT for uk.tech.digital-tv)
charles wrote:
In article , Java Jive wrote: On Sun, 06 Nov 2011 21:39:25 +0000 (GMT), charles wrote: Musicality referred to the "improvements" heard by some people playing recordings on imperfect reproduction equipment As a former amateur musician and singer of many years' standing, I find your own coined meaning of the word deeply insulting. Not "my coined meaning" - but a meaning used in the 1980s when CDs (digital stuff) first turned up. I, too, am "an amateur musician of many years' standing"; I don't see the relevance. Some people actually preferred distortion in recordings since they'd become accustomed to it. They'd obviously never been to a concert hall and heard real music. I think what Charles is saying is that the word was coined by the specialist press and/or the cognoscenti as a means of glossing over the fact that many people expected the sound to meet their preconceptions, rather than be perfectly accurate. I know from my own experience of many years ago that when I first heard a live solo violin I found the sound, with its exquisite harmonics, quite difficult to take. When FM radio became popular I remember people (especially my grandad) complaining bitterly that the sound was 'uncanny'! He used many other words and phrases, all of which meant 'realistic' but with a negative bias. "It doesn't sound like a bloody wireless, that's the trouble with it!" He didn't have a telly, I should add. He always listened to AM after the first few weeks. Oddly, he was a bander and attended many concerts. Bill |
Digitising Vinyls (OT for uk.tech.digital-tv)
On Sun, 06 Nov 2011 22:54:30 +0000, Bill Wright
wrote: charles wrote: In article , Java Jive wrote: On Sun, 06 Nov 2011 21:39:25 +0000 (GMT), charles wrote: Musicality referred to the "improvements" heard by some people playing recordings on imperfect reproduction equipment As a former amateur musician and singer of many years' standing, I find your own coined meaning of the word deeply insulting. Not "my coined meaning" - but a meaning used in the 1980s when CDs (digital stuff) first turned up. I, too, am "an amateur musician of many years' standing"; I don't see the relevance. Some people actually preferred distortion in recordings since they'd become accustomed to it. They'd obviously never been to a concert hall and heard real music. I think what Charles is saying is that the word was coined by the specialist press and/or the cognoscenti as a means of glossing over the fact that many people expected the sound to meet their preconceptions, rather than be perfectly accurate. I know from my own experience of many years ago that when I first heard a live solo violin I found the sound, with its exquisite harmonics, quite difficult to take. When FM radio became popular I remember people (especially my grandad) complaining bitterly that the sound was 'uncanny'! He used many other words and phrases, all of which meant 'realistic' but with a negative bias. "It doesn't sound like a bloody wireless, that's the trouble with it!" He didn't have a telly, I should add. He always listened to AM after the first few weeks. Oddly, he was a bander and attended many concerts. My late wife sometimes complained about high quality reproduction of sound. Her objection was that it was "as though the people speaking or the musicians were in the room". She didn't want them in the room. She wanted to listen as though she was overhearing them from a different room. That was sort of understandable because she was normally listening while doing something else. Listening was not her main activity, and she didn't want the sound to distract her. High quality sound was too intrusive. -- Peter Duncanson (in uk.tech.digital-tv) |
Digitising Vinyls (OT for uk.tech.digital-tv)
On Sun, 06 Nov 2011 19:26:09 GMT, Steve Thackery
wrote: JJ, do you have a website? Yes! As in ... In various posts June 2011, Java Jive wrote: I've described how I deal with the dust/gunge problems here ... http://www.macfh.co.uk/JavaJive/Audi...storation.html ;-) This account is interesting and informative, and I think lots of people with vinyl would find it helpful. I think it warrants posting somewhere more prominent than NNTP. Nice work. Yes. I can see both the above and 'Vinyl vs CD' ... http://www.macfh.co.uk/JavaJive/Audi...VinylVsCD.html .... being updated as a result of this. May not be able to be soon though, which is why I thought I'd put it all down on record somewhere now, while it was all still fresh in my memory. -- ================================================== ======= Please always reply to ng as the email in this post's header does not exist. Or use a contact address at: http://www.macfh.co.uk/JavaJive/JavaJive.html http://www.macfh.co.uk/Macfarlane/Macfarlane.html |
Digitising Vinyls (OT for uk.tech.digital-tv)
mu·si·cal·i·ty /?myo?ozi?kal?te-/
Noun: 1. Tastefulness and accomplishment in music. 2. The quality of being melodious and tuneful. On Sun, 06 Nov 2011 22:35:59 +0000 (GMT), charles wrote: Not "my coined meaning" - but a meaning used in the 1980s when CDs (digital stuff) first turned up. So someone else's coined meaning then, and I apologise for the 'your'/'my'. However, my point still stands, that it's an illogical and absurd abuse of the generally accepted meaning of the word. -- ================================================== ======= Please always reply to ng as the email in this post's header does not exist. Or use a contact address at: http://www.macfh.co.uk/JavaJive/JavaJive.html http://www.macfh.co.uk/Macfarlane/Macfarlane.html |
Digitising Vinyls (OT for uk.tech.digital-tv)
On 6 Nov,
Bill Wright wrote: I know from my own experience of many years ago that when I first heard a live solo violin I found the sound, with its exquisite harmonics, quite difficult to take. Most of my recollections of live solo violins did not register "exquisite harmonics", The worst ones were my 3 sons practicing the second fiddle part of tne national anthem, a most discordant piece if ever there was one! Why on earth do fiddle teachers give that as homework? Is it to get their own back on parents? -- BD Change lycos to yahoo to reply |
Digitising Vinyls (OT for uk.tech.digital-tv)
"Steve Thackery" a écrit dans le message de news:
... JJ, do you have a website? This account is interesting and informative, and I think lots of people with vinyl would find it helpful. I think it warrants posting somewhere more prominent than NNTP. Nice work. -- SteveT =============================================== My way of doing the same things : here : http://www.a-reny.com/iexplorer/restauration.html -- Allen RENY www.a-reny.com |
Digitising Vinyls (OT for uk.tech.digital-tv)
"charles" wrote in message
... In article , David Looser wrote: "charles" wrote do you remember the term "musicality"? it seems to be relevant here. Perhaps you'd like to explain exactly how it is relevant? Rob apparently prefers digitised vinyl to the digitised master. In other words he considers an additional process (that of recording to, and subsequently playing back from, vinyl) to improve the sound of the original. Does that create "musicality"? Yes. Musicality referred to the "improvements" heard by some people playing recordings on imperfect reproduction equipment I'd have thought that the musicality of a recording was something that is created by the musicians in the recording studio, not by technicians in a post-recording process. You'd be wrong. Well I'm only "wrong" if you use the meaning of "musicality" that you have quoted above. Its not a definition of the word I accept. Someone else posted this definition: Noun: 1. Tastefulness and accomplishment in music. 2. The quality of being melodious and tuneful. and if you accept that definition I am clearly not "wrong" David. |
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