Am I alone feeling like this?

raulvilla

24-09-2014 15:06:46

I own over 3,000 CD's and find it cumbersome to load them all on a hard drive, so when I feel like playing one, I look for it and play it, sitting on my dedicated music room, relaxing, maybe drinking a glass of wine and-maybe perhaps reading a book.
I see companies still making CD players, upgrading them, improving upon existing models as not everyone has the time to place their music on a "stick". Most times, for me, listening to an specific artist, song or album is impulse driven; so before I lose the impulse, I place the CD in my BCD-1 and listen to it. Am I alone feeling like this? Will the BCD-1 ever come back?

CanadianMaestro

24-09-2014 15:20:48

You're not alone! CDs are still superb media.

Gary Dayton

24-09-2014 20:59:35

You're not at all alone. If enough of you protest loudly enough, we may bring a CD player back to market :D

With the development of the Bryston Optical Drive accessory for the BDP, you can play CDs directly and rip them. I think it will be popular for people who have no desire to lose a large part of their life ripping CDs, but are content to do it one by one when listening to them.

--Gary / Bryston

CanadianMaestro

25-09-2014 02:52:23

Well, if you do bring in a "BCD-2", please add the ability to program track sequences on playback. Also, a BNC digital out would be great too (like BDP-1), as I favor BNC over AES/EBU.

Chris Rice

25-09-2014 03:36:47

CanadianMaestro

25-09-2014 08:40:11

wilsonij

28-09-2014 03:02:31

I think there are (at least) three factors at play here:

1. Listening behaviour - many of us still like to open a cd case, put the disc in, and look at the artwork or read the lyrics and other liner notes while playing the album from start to finish in the order the artist decided upon; however increasingly folks listen to individual tracks, hopping from one to the other across artists and styles, and if you're in the latter camp the inconvenience of one-disc-at-a-time cd players just don't cut it.

2. DAC - you may have it in your player, in your pre-amp, or in a separate unit; where it is today might be through conscious choice or it might be through circumstance, but either way I'd suggest that you *do* want options and flexibility but you *don't* want to pay for something you're not going to use.

3. Media - increasingly those in control of the industry are pushing for non-physical distribution where there is greater scope for control and profit; this is true of film as well as music. The cessation of physical media may, or may not, be inevitable (and even if it does happen, over what timeframe) but the overall direction of travel is undeniable.

Does that mean cd is dead ? Absolutely not !!
Does that mean there's no market for serious quality cd players ? Absolutely not !!

But I would say that it means the size and nature of the market is changing and, like it or not, any business has to be mindful of where it sits today and where it will be sitting tomorrow...

Ian

CanadianMaestro

28-09-2014 12:10:48

Well expressed, Ian. All valid and good points.

For me, space constraints are starting to take their toll. I actually will not buy an LP and will opt for CD, because my shelf space has maxed out now. Another "advantage" of digital files and the superb file playback quality of the BDP-1. But the tactile pleasures of opening a CD case/handling a vinyl LP are unbeatable.

Maestro

Gary Dayton

30-09-2014 14:59:36

Even today, the largest repository of lossless DRM free music available is on CD. Especially, if your musical tastes lean more towards eclectic, it's difficult to find the releases you seek available as a lossless download. Occasionally, an album I'm after will land on HDTracks, but more often than not, I'm choosing between the vinyl (and the gratis 320k MP3 download, bleh) or the CD and a rip-it-myself lossless copy.

I've nearly fully committed to digital file playback by now, but I really miss the ritual of pulling an album (CD or otherwise) off the shelf and reading detailed liner notes. I'm bothered that the labels won't publish full liner notes with most releases.

--Gary / Bryston

CanadianMaestro

30-09-2014 17:32:42

Good point about the sparse liner notes with digital formats. I especially like to have the lyric translations of choral pieces/operas/lieder (German songs), included in most CD packages, but not with downloaded "hi-res" files. Huge difference to the enjoyment factor.

Cheers,
M

Gary Dayton

01-10-2014 13:21:02

Huge! Also, during the more "explosive" part of my musical collection's growth, I discovered more new music by finding common threads buried in liner notes which I no longer have immediate access to.

--Gary / Bryston

Jozsef

08-10-2014 04:20:47

The production and printing costs for CD booklets could be quite substantial so it's disappointing and paradoxical that they're not offered when digital distribution reduces the financial barrier so much. I think things may change due to competitive pressures but we'll just have to wait and see. Perhaps a bit of pressure from us as consumers would help.

Wim J

28-08-2015 17:19:27

raulvilla

03-01-2017 19:33:48

WELCOME BRYSTON BCD-3 !!!