This is an entirely different argument you're presenting now.
First you said that the frequency range is limited to 17kHz at the high end, which is false.
You also said that compression is the problem, which is false.
What you're describing and the links you NOW provide are not a problem with the frequency response OR dynamic range of the CD format.
They are a function of bad mastering. The loudness wars began actually in the 1950s, and kept escalating. Phil Spector used his "Wall of Sound" technique to increase the signal amplitude of tracks prepped for radio transmission... but since the 1970s there has been a worsening trend to master audio nearer to 0 dBFS than in the past. The result is that the larger dynamic range of CD is being wasted since the levels are mastered to a constant near the peak dynamic range.
If the audio engineers simply mastered recordings today actually knew what they were doing, CD's would all sound great... and a very few of them do.
But what you're encountering in the analog realm is a tradeoff... you're gaining a noise floor which also reduces the dynamic range, worse than CD's.
My personal preference, though, is 24-bit Linear PCM. This is also a digital format, and it is vastly superior to 16-bit Linear PCM. Where CD audio has 65,536 possible amplitude values per quantization interval, 24-bit LPCM has 12.7 *MILLION* possible amplitude values per quantization interval. This provides a degree of amplitude resolution and dynamic range that makes even the erratic amplitude of cymbals sound pristine, more so than any analog medium can handle.
Note that I say medium... this is very important. Analog is in theory without limit of dynamic range and has no amplitude resolution limits. But the formats that analog is fixed in, whether reel to reel, vinyl, etc. all have compromises whether a higher noise floor, groove width (vinyl) that limits dynamic range, magnetization of playback heads and wearing out of the recording on each successive playback... the available analog media are not up to the task of repeatedly providing the kind of dynamic range and amplitude resolution of digital past the first playback.
A properly mastered digital recording, one that hasn't been "pumped" for radio airplay, plays beautifully.... and even more so if it's 24-bit LPCM versus 16.
Nature abhors a moron. -H.L. Mencken
http://www.cinemalogue.com
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