It's August 31, 2025, 10:22:47 AM
no anderson paak on this album was a huge mistake considering that the choruses are lacking according to most reviews, anderson paak would have really fixed that issue
BJ The Chicago Kid has replaced him I dont know why.
Bi did a great job!
BJ did a great job!
he’s not bad… but paak and even october london >>>
vinyl sounds more alive think of live instrumentation…. the bass is never overpowering when u got a live band playing.. that’s what vinyl is good at replicating
I love vinyl but still prefer CDs.A 16-bit WAV file on a CD sounds closer to the studio version than vinyl due to the following reasons:1. Dynamic Range: CDs have a wider dynamic range (96 dB), capturing both quiet and loud sounds more accurately, compared to vinyl’s 60–70 dB.2. Frequency Response: CDs consistently reproduce the full range of human hearing (20 Hz to 22 kHz), while vinyl can lose details in bass and treble due to physical limitations. Not everyone has a perfect vinyl setup. 3. Noise-Free Playback: CDs are free of surface noise and distortion, unlike vinyl, which can have crackles, pops, and wear over time.4. Precision: Digital recordings (even when mastered in 24-bit and reduced to 16-bit for CD) ensure consistent and precise sound reproduction.In essence, CDs provide a cleaner and more faithful reproduction of the studio recording than vinyl.
Does anyone else hear Doggy Dogg World in the baseline on “Gangsta Pose” after the beat switch on the second half of the song? The baseline sounds very similar to Doggy Dogg World to my ears.
Also, the notion that vinyl or tape inherently replicates a studio experience better than CD is subjective and not supported by technical fact. Preferences differ from listener to listener. The statement is more personal taste than objective truth. It’s just not broadly accurate. Statements like these are largely subjective opinions rather than objective facts. While some people prefer the “warm” character they perceive in vinyl or tape, this doesn’t mean those formats inherently replicate the studio experience better than CDs, nor that all audiophiles agree with such a hierarchy.Studio Experience vs. Playback Medium:Modern recording studios often use high-resolution digital formats as their “master” reference. A well-mastered CD created directly from these digital masters can very closely represent what the engineers and musicians heard during mixing. Vinyl, on the other hand, requires a specialized mastering process that adapts the music to the medium’s physical constraints. This does not automatically bring you closer to the studio sound—it just presents a different, often more colored interpretation.Warmth and Coloration:The “warm” sound attributed to vinyl commonly comes from subtle distortions, harmonic enhancements, and the playback chain (turntable, cartridge, phono preamp). While these colorations can be pleasing, they are not necessarily more accurate. They’re a signature of the format and the playback gear, not a direct reflection of the original studio tracks.Tape vs. CD:Analog tape can impart its own sonic signature—mild compression, saturation, and a softer top end—which some listeners find appealing. However, tapes are also prone to noise, wear, and degradation over time. CDs, being a digital medium, do not degrade with playback, providing a cleaner and more consistent sound. Whether this is “better” or “thinner” is subjective, not a matter of fact.Audiophile opinions vary. The claim that vinyl > tape > CD is not accurate. Audiophiles have widely differing opinions (any audiophile will tell you this), and many appreciate high-quality digital formats for their clarity and stability (I am in this camp). Others prefer vinyl’s tactile experience and distinctive character (I can certainly appreciate this but am not interested in having two separate hardware setups to oblige vinyl). The only thing any audiophile will tell you with confidence is that there is no universal consensus.