Quote:
Originally Posted by warrrreagl
Jethro Tull's Thick as a Brick actually opened out into a full-size newspaper. Beatles Magical Mystery Tour came with an album-sized booklet of photo stills from the movie.
The sound quality of analog (vinyl) sound is more "three dimensional" to the ear whereas the discrete point sampling technique of digital audio is always flat and two dimensional sounding to me. For example, if I listen to "Twist and Shout" on vinyl, I can "hear" Ringo's drums as actually behind John's vocals. However, digitally-recorded audio seems to have all the instruments and voices side-by-side in a line without anyone being "behind" anyone to give the three-dimensional effect.
Easier to hear than it is to explain.
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cool, i didn't know that about thick as a brick...as for the audio...
both the rolling stones
let it bleed and david bowie's
ziggy stardust came with the disclaimer "to be played at maximum volume" and, they were right, if you did, you heard "more" stuff, like you were saying with the layering....
Quote:
Originally Posted by Push-Pull
.... I spent hours looking through all the hieroglyphics in the artwork to find all the oddball whimsical stuff that they tossed in. ....
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that's what i'm talking about...i would spend hours looking at the covers, seeking little inside jokes and such....
Quote:
Originally Posted by ngdawg
I must have the PG version....she has a top on
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wierd....honestly, on mine she is topless....