Old Pa
Headphoneus Supremus
- Joined
- Dec 9, 2001
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Quote:
You should hear your HDCDs on a bona fide HDCD player; it's an effective system. The artists who chose to employ HDCD coding were generally more concerned about their recordings' sound than was the rest of the pack. And the Pacific Microsonics HDCD decoding chip decoded other redbook CDs very well as well. I know I was surprised to find I already owned several dozen HDCD recordings. My first HDCD Denon was a 5-disc changes that went for @$300 street and sounded very good. Current HDCD Denons range from that price to @$1,000 and up.
Originally Posted by SGI I have about 20 or so HDCD titles in my CD library... but I never did listen to it in its HDCD decoded form. The only time I tried it was via Windows Media Player which I only noticed subtle difference since Windows Media Player cannot bypass the dreadded upsampling of the windows mixer unlike using APE (Monkey's Audio - a lossless compression format) being played back via Winamp thru the ASIO driver. The reason why I wanted to give HDCD more chances is because of some 192kHz/24bit mastered CDs that I have (the CD is in itself the same old redbook CD - 44.1kHz/16bit - but it was processed by using a 192kHz/24bit DSP - I think XRCD2 uses simliar processing as well) I'll also look into the suggestion of Denon. How much do they go for on the street? (are we allow to discuss street price here? if not, please let me know the MSRP instead) |
You should hear your HDCDs on a bona fide HDCD player; it's an effective system. The artists who chose to employ HDCD coding were generally more concerned about their recordings' sound than was the rest of the pack. And the Pacific Microsonics HDCD decoding chip decoded other redbook CDs very well as well. I know I was surprised to find I already owned several dozen HDCD recordings. My first HDCD Denon was a 5-disc changes that went for @$300 street and sounded very good. Current HDCD Denons range from that price to @$1,000 and up.