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OMG this is just what I needed today, I've been so HOMESICK 😢. When I get home everything will be so different, and I'll be walking. No more scootin around backwards on my walker. I guess I'm getting myself back on my feet quite Literally. I'm going to be seeing everything clean and clear with new eyes. No more pain in my body or my heart, so I'll be finally get to go out and actually enjoy all of this stuff. Thank You for All the work YOU and your CREW put into making these videos. God Bless and Good Luck and Be Safe Always.... ❤ MumZie ❤
The groove is the sound waves pressed into the surface of the vinyl. It makes the needle vibrate back and forth and the needle converts the vibrations into electrical current like the diaphragm of a tiny microphone.
That is literally what it is. It's the vibrations of the sound waves, and printed onto a circular piece of vinyl. Take a regular dressmakers pin, stick it through the bottom of a styrofoam cup, put a record that you don't love very much on the turntable, and hold the needle against the groove. Put your ear up to the opening of the cup, and just listen. It works just like your tin can and string telephone from when you were a kid. Well, from when I was a kid.
Yes the vibration is engraved into the record, the needle recreates those vibrations as it passes over them and they get amplified. In a literal sense the quality of sound from a record is worse, because it is a recreation on a physical material and it can't quite encapsulate exactly what was originally played in to it. In a human sense records/vinyl often make the tone a bit warmer which a lot of people really like.
I would say playing vinyl is more of a ceremonial thing than a sound thing. You also listen in another way. You don't have Playlists or change records all the time. You experience the album as a whole and how the artist intended it to be listened to.
Analogue systems alow for infinite varience. Digital systems may allow for millions of variations, but will never produce the infinite range of sounds, colors, or other reproductions that are possible with analogue. 🤷♂️
Digital audio will by its own nature perfectly reproduce everything below half the file's sampling frequency though. So if we can only perceive up to a certain frequency, we only need to sample at twice that to literally encompass all the audible information that we're capable of experiencing. Rather than the method of storage being the point of failure, it's much more sensible to look at the, EQ, effects, DAC and speakers/headphones as the critical components of a digital listening experience
He did... Vibrations... What is sound? Vibrating air. And what transmits sounds even better than air? Solid matter. So the vinyls get imprinted with the vibrations of the music and the needle picks them up again while it travels the grooves, thst gets amplified, in olden times by a kind of "trumpet" on a gramophone for example, the usual record players via speakers. Not that hard to understand.
@@martinroner5688 Definitely not hard to understand, but the issue is asking as question and not getting an answer, not whether it's hard to understand or not. Is that hard to understand for you?
@@martinroner5688 the only explanation he gives is how it feels to him. He obviously doesn't know himself what the answer is. You can tell he's unsure himself when he says "it's vibrations, isn't it?" Nothing wrong with not knowing an answer, but I guess his ego got the best of him. Everything else he said was great, it just didn't answer the question
If you really want to blow your mind, input your record deck straight into a direct input of your amp, which bypasses the inbuilt RIAA equalisation of your amp (or preamp), meaning your records will be nothing but treble. A vinyl recording is made with the low frequencies reduced and the high frequencies boosted, and on playback, the opposite occurs with the phono preamp cutting the high frequency and boosting the low. This should give a flat response. This is great for attenuating unwanted high frequencies like surface noise, etc, but can accidentally boost the unwanted sound of turntable rumble. This is why audiophiles will do everything they can to isolate their turntable from vibration.
I don't think it's a matter of being better, but with vinyl there's a lot of added randomness, the needle will vibrate in a different way each time it's played due to vibrations of the room, temperature and how worn down the record is. It's the equivalent of hearing an acoustic or electric guitar or piano vs. hearing a MIDI reproduction of a guitar or electronic keyboard. It's just different experiences.
That's not true. I didn't grow up listening to vinyl. But I am a musician and was always very interested in sounds and how to make them and what they look like. My friend played a record for me that I listened to many times before digitally. There is a huge difference between the record and the digital file. The guy explaining it is not wrong.
The grooves vibrate at different frequencies like scratch sound I wonder if u could scratch a record with ur front tooth just right and vibrate the scull just right to hear it slightly lol😅
You have to relax yourself to grab the needle and lay it down and pick it up off the Record so you don't scratch it. So it Mellows you out to a certain extent. Just got back into vinyl records and I forgot all about having to get up and turn the album over. Brought back beautiful memories. It gives you a DJ feel. Didn't keep my records clean when I was younger now I like dusting them off and keeping them in mint condition. My buddy thought vinyl was going to disappear . I told him it wasn't going nowhere. He thinks the same thing about musical instruments. Musical instruments aren't going nowhere.😊
For the younger adults , you are really missing out big time !!!!! Nothing like a big kick-ass stereo with speakers that are 3'x3' to give you the real sound you can feel !!!
It's not magic, but it is pretty damn cool. Sound is just vibrations so a vinyl record is nothing more than a blueprint or a set of directions for the vibrations to form. It is oike magic just like a power generator and airplanes flying.... It kinda makes sense until you think about it 😅
I think cause the vibrations are still physically coming from that needle... Not through a digital speaker, we can hear the small crackles and pops and such... It is like listening to a guitar in person compared to through a stereo, in my opinion
@@Floedekage exactly, that's more specific to what I was saying that I didn't think about... Any MIDI lacks the genuine feel, it's fabricated, no mater the way you look at it Part of why I hate most modern music is you don't get that scratch on the strings with these MIDI strings and orchestras... Using a real instrument just... Hits different
@@TheNuDiabolic the pick on the string? They have a scratchy cracky sound, also depending on the string type of course, and pick styles, patterns, etc.
@@thescouts4734 the crackling/popping is an artifact of the record player itself. Not the guitar or any other instrument that was recorded. That popping is mostly due to imperfections/debris in the needle or grooves of the vinyl.