| T.R | Title | User | Personal Name
 | Date | Lines | 
|---|
| 1112.1 | ps | CSMSRE::WRIGHT | Dain Bramage | Fri Mar 04 1988 13:53 | 5 | 
|  |     
    Forgot to mention that the noise only happens in one channel and
    that I can hear it in the headphones pluged into the cd jack...
    
    
 | 
| 1112.2 | Maybe this is it | BINKLY::STROUBLE |  | Fri Mar 04 1988 15:46 | 22 | 
|  | 
    
    When I  first  started listening to classical CD's I also thought
    there was something  wrong  with  my player.  I would hear little
    noises that just shouldn't  be  on  well  reviewed,  top  quality
    disks.  The noises sounded  to  me  like  crinkling cellophane or
    maybe the shutter of a 35mm  camera.  I actually returned a disk,
    (Watermusic, Pinnock) because of the noises, but they  were there
    in the same place in the replacement disk.
    
    Eventually I figured it out.  The noises were on  so  many  disks
    that it  became  obvious.  Classical music instruments are noisy.
    Valves  clack, bows  slap.    The  musicians  aren't  always  the
    quietest bunch either. 
    
    I felt better about the noises  once  I found out what they were.
    The better the recording, the more likely you are  to hear noise.
    On  the  other  hand,  more  care is taken to minimize extraneous
    noise  on  the better recordings, so all in all, they are usually
    quieter.
    
    
 | 
| 1112.3 | Throat clearing? | FACT01::LAWRENCE | Jim/Hartford A.C.T.,DTN 383-4523 | Fri Mar 04 1988 19:55 | 11 | 
|  |     
    Yes, I agree with .2 about the noise.  You must be hearing audience
    noise, coughs and the like.  And musician noise.  Rock recordings
    made in studios don't have the ambience recorded between tracks
    like they do on many classical disks when the recorders are left
    running.  However, it worries me that you only hear it on 1 channel.
     That smells of equipment failure.  You should hear ambient noise
    from both speakers on the classical disks.
    
    Jim
    
 | 
| 1112.4 | Distortion?????? | NCVAX1::SUZDA |  | Mon Mar 07 1988 08:39 | 10 | 
|  |     I also have been hearing what I think is distortion.  I have a Pioneer
    9010 unit and while listening to various recordings, I get what
    I think is distortion on one channel.  At first I thought it was
    a dirty channel on the amp (15 years old), or the speakers (10 years
    old), but I plugged in headphones directly to the CD unit and the
    noise is still there.  It seems to disappear when I crank up the
    volume but that may be because I can only hear the pictures on the
    walls rattling.  Well, I'll just have to wait here for an answer.
    
    
 | 
| 1112.5 | Chirp, chirp | AQUA::ROST | Tush, tush, you lose your push | Mon Mar 07 1988 09:22 | 8 | 
|  |     
    
    If the noise sounds like chirping, it may be some sort of digital error.
    
    Before I had my player fixed, in addition to gross "skipping" it
    would also occasionally "chirp" on certain discs.
    
 | 
| 1112.6 | Solved (to my satisfaction...) | CSMSRE::WRIGHT | Underneath the Radar | Thu Mar 10 1988 10:30 | 20 | 
|  |     
    fiqured it out (actually it was explained to me...) -
    
    The various noises have been attributed (in order) to -
    
    1. Bad Engineer
    
    2. Noisy Musicians
    
    3. Full Symphony Recordings of very dynamic music occasionaly have
    more data then bits available.  (no flames, it makes sense to me
    in a weird software sort of way :-)
    
    The system that proved that it was the recording was Maggie deck,
    the Musical Concpets (??) Passive preamps, 2 mono-blocked haffler
    dh220's with the MC gx mods, and B&W matrix 1's...Sweet System!!
    
    thanks for the help,
    
    Clark.
 | 
| 1112.7 | Noisy CD | CSC32::MA_BAKER |  | Wed Jul 20 1988 15:58 | 4 | 
|  |     Yes, I have a Vivaldi "Four Seasons" and I think someone is actually
    walking around the room on it. I have Sony D5, and this is the only
    recording that I have ever noticed noise like that!
    
 |