I'm exausted trying to expalin for the 1000th time how there are differences in recording
technique verses recording
medium.
I'll just ask if you've ever seen an outstanding picture taken by a great photographer using a camera with "low" resolution or a lousy photograph taken with a "high" resolution camera taken by a less skilled photographer. Just give your Aunt Mabel a $10,000 18 megapixel camera and see if she can take consistently "great" pictures. I'm sure Ansel Adams could have taken award quality pictures with an Instamatic camera, "low resolution" notwithstanding. The photographer's skill (and in this case, the recording engineer's) will trump any contribution by the medium every time.
If any of you have my "Soundhound Organ Demo" CDs, I would remind you that they were recorded not only with "low resolution 16 bit" equipment, but with a first generation DAT recorder that used old fashoned analog "brick wall" anti-aliasing filters! Not to brag, but I think those recordings are not too shabby sounding.
Also keep in mind that the DVD is
multichannel verses
two channel for the CD. This will make all the difference in the world in the timbre and dimentionality of the sound of recorded instruments. Everything sounds more natural with surround information adding to the realism of the soundfield.
Suggesting that the mere fact that something is recorded in a "high resolution" format is the major determinant of the sound of a good recording is actually quite an insult to the people whose skill and experience go unnoticed behind the scenes every day. The decisions on where to place the microphones, what kind of microphone to use, and the balances of the instruments in a mix (not to mention the fact that Diana Krall is playing a very fine piano!) all make a gigantic contribution to the final sound of a recording. Such things as sample rate, bit depth, DSD vs PCM etc don't matter squat in the grand scheme of things.
[This message has been edited by soundhound (edited April 09, 2004).]