It was inspired by the Yamaha equipment from the past that has an attractive price now, with "NATURAL SOUND" on the front. Yamaha has been relatively respectful by making good audiophile products with measurements.Using a phrase like "more natural" to describe music reproduction is subjective, which is what I do try to steer clear of when considering equipment quality. It is the sort of thing I expect to read in an old school review. "The speakers produced an airy, natural sound that was layered with accurate bass notes and depth".....Huh
Vinyl records do sound better many times, but this is not because the format itself is better than digital. The heat generated by vinyl manufacturing equipment means that artificial changes are more limited than digital editing. I need a good turntable and ADC for preserving old vinyl records that were made when the analog master tapes were in good condition.Oh the title of this thread is half travesty, half joke. Even more so if the OP was serious, which seems to be the case.
For getting to the root of the title of this thread, this article is a must-read:
Myths (Vinyl) - Hydrogenaudio Knowledgebase
wiki.hydrogenaud.io
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