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The Quandary of the CD Owner: The Terrors of Technology


Article # : 13540 

Section : THE ARTS
Issue Date : 4 / 1988  2,054 Words
Author : Todd Culbertson
Todd Culbertson writes editorials for the Richmond News Leader.

       Technology creates dilemmas. Guests tell Phil Donahue and Oprah Winfrey what they think about test tube babies and artificial hearts. Sometimes, though, technological dilemmas can be delightful, not merely demoralizing--as in the brave new world confronting record collectors. Indeed, so-called audiophiles are experts at adjusting to technology--78s were succeeded by 33s, hi-fi by stereo, reel-to-reel tapes by cassettes, and so on. To buy a compact disc (CD) player or not to buy one, that is the latest question.
       
        Today the answer is a resounding "maybe." Tomorrow it will be "yes." Music lovers will have no other choice. Already some recording companies release only compact discs; others soon will follow. When the time comes to buy a new recording of, say, the Eroica, it may be available as a compact disc but not as a record. Audiophiles have heard the future, and it's the CD.
       
        Aural Krispies
       
        CDs sound better than LPs. The reproduction is clean, without the scratches and rubs that distort the sound coming from records. Snap, crackle, and pop may make great cereal music, but Brahms goes better without the aural krispies. Once a person has listened to a CD, his old LPs sound like the static from radio stations tuned in while driving along lonely patches of the interstate. The key is that CDs are "read" not by needles, but by lasers. Wise men ask neither how nor why, they just listen--and enjoy. They also remember this: A disc is just a disc, and recorded music can never displace live performances. All the technology in the world cannot re-create the emotional bond that develops between an audience and a performer in a concert ... (1982 of 12475 Characters)
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