High Infidelity


I’m unapologetically old school. I own rather than lease my car and not because I think it drives better that way. I own my music and not because I think it sounds better than streaming. I’m puzzled as to why it’s cheaper to buy a CD, have it shipped home and rip it rather than downloading it from a popular digital audio store. I’m disappointed that artists who bypass the CD process seem to only offer MP3 downloads. But I digress…

I recently purchased music for download on Qobuz. The website identified the download as CD quality 16 bits, 44.1 kHz. The downloaded files turned out to have varying bitrates between 756 & 938 Kbps rather than 1,411 Kbps. I contacted Qobuz through their help messaging. They thanked me for bringing this to their attention and stated they would request a corrected copy from the record label. They unfortunately could not give me a timeframe as this would be up to the record label.

I requested a refund on the basis that I purchased CD quality tracks for immediate download per their website description and the prospect of potentially getting them at an undermined time in the future was not acceptable. I was told that Qobuz does not provide any refunds on purchased music in any circumstance. There are no exceptions to this rule. I asked to speak to a supervisor but my request was denied.

I’d like to get feedback on:
-     whether others have encountered downloads that weren’t as advertised or if this was truly an exception
-    what you think of their refund policy
-    any possible recourse

Thanks
 

rpmpam

Qobuz sounds a little better to me and that seems to be the case with most folks

i have bought some hi res downloads and can't tell the difference from streaming, so not much point to owning for me. I still prefer the sound of vinyl- nothing like it- but the convenience factor of streaming usually wins out 

@ghdprentice   +1

For Quobuz it would be far too complicated to allow for refunds. I suppose, they are not in the position to check every record they 'import'.

Me, I would consider the annoyance you encountered as a write-off. I guess (and hope for you) that your are not talking about more than a couple of dollars.

With Quobuz, one can create hundreds of 'own' playlists'. Feels a bit like owning the music, although it's still streaming.

I have thousands of vinyl and hundreds of CDs. Also been streaming for a couple years. However I have never ever purchased downloaded music and never will. Seems to make absolutely no sense to me. Once in a great while an album on Qobuz I placed in my favorites is no longer available. If I really can't live without it, I either buy the vinyl or CD. It's that simple. Streaming has become the norm in my house of stereo. Like ghdprentice says, done right it sounds as good as vinyl or CDs. Overall nothing beats it imo.

 

 

rpmpam

... very good question but no, AIFF 

AIFF is a lossless file format, full 16/44.1 resolution. You got what you paid for.