is the sound of vinyl due to the physical process of the turntable?


Same here. I do not own a turntable, however, if the sound of vinyl comes from the physical act of the record on the turntable why can't I transfer digital audio or at least emulate that process to digitally recreate that sound? I remember back in the 1970's you had 45rpm records on the back of cereal boxes and they were not vinyl, however they sounded good why can't I do that myself?
guitarsam

Showing 6 responses by guitarsam

Sam here and i now realize it is not necessarily vinyl in particular but very specific vinyl records that have a warm open soundstage with drums that are relaxed and the music isn't upclose to the speakers and everything sounds alive.
sam here is it possible to make a dummy record like the nothing record (1978) that was cut with no music just the blank grooves and play that while i run digital audio somehow through the stylus cartridge
Same here and by giving up and going vinyl I will not have the answer which I believe will be found by stepping outside the box + I believe that new remastered vinyl is fake vinyl and to my ears does not have that stereos I hear from 1st press vinyl. This is a conspiracy to destroy the healing effects of real audio and the Hypersonic effect
Sam here again, i'm not sure if the sound I like from vintage vinyl is the hardware creating the stereo effect I hear or is it present on the master tape? And if it is present how come I don't hear it on the digital album.

I did discover this and it may just be the placebo effect however i think it sounds more vinyl like with that stereoness i hear with 1970's vinyl. i'm running digital audio through this filter with all the effects turned off. 
https://i.postimg.cc/Y0v3Hsgt/azimuth.jpg  I realize running audio through the azimuth filter with all the effects turned off should have no effect on the sound quality? So what am I hearing.

sample 1: http://u.pc.cd/SO7rtalK

sample 2: http://u.pc.cd/VEyotalK

results: https://i.postimg.cc/GhFCw7jF/cover-edited.jpg
If a vinyl record sits on a platter and a cd sits on a small spindle how do you keep the cd from wobbling? If I reverse the process and make a spinning cd size platter and have the laser read the cd from the top by eliminating the wobble could I improve the sound quality? When i play a digital download there is no physical cd player so no wobble and the sound is no better than a cd playing?
Sam here and I just had another breakthrough in my quest to make digital audio sound alive with a real natural tone that resonates with my ears.

https://i.postimg.cc/CLGrmXw8/IMG-20200612-070629.jpg

I found an old piece of wood on the ground, it could be up to 100 years old and I was thinking about how a Stradivarius violin is revered for It's unparalleled resonating tone and the solid wood that was used to make the violin plays a big part in that tone.

The question is how do I encode the tone of the wood onto digital audio? And then I had the thought why not take the light bulb out of the lamp across the room from my PC and put the wood in the socket? would the electrical current pull the frequencies from the wood into the wiring and encode them onto the digital audio as I did a re-encode? Well, as crazy as it sounds I believe the answer is yes. here is how this old piece of wood colors the tone of digital audio.

digital download flac 16/44. http://u.pc.cd/WrQ7

digital download flac 16/44 + old wood. http://u.pc.cd/2dSctalK