![]() I think I may, I do prefer the sound and the catalogue is pretty extensive so far. The question really is am I going to switch, for £20/month, do I have the confidence I’m going to get what Spotify I have not been through the Classical Music as I am not an expert however two of the pieces I return to often, Daniel Barenboim’s Chopin Nocturnes and Vladimir Ashkenazy’s Rachmaninov Piano Concerto #2 are not there, that I can find. ![]() The John Coltrane catalogue is exceptional. was very favourable and there are loads of rare EPs, special editions and other sessions. My trawl of artists, Radiohead, U2, Arcade Fire, Amos Lee, Damien Rice, etc. The Tidal Catalogue appears to be, at first glance, rather comprehensive and interesting. ![]() The only issue I’ve had, which may need looking at was that I received a phone call on my Android device (Nexus 5) and when I answered the music I was streaming went down the line to my caller!!! Hopefully this is an isolated case! Tidal’s app is very functional but intuitive it is black and white, which I like, and is at least as easy to get to grips with as Spotify’s. I have been running Spotify on android for a long time now, and it is very stable indeed. Really we need to look at the User Interfaces and depth of the catalogue as well as the subscription cost.Īll of the services have good Apps for iOS, Android and PCs. So the quality is there, what about the competition. Neither of these points is a big deal, to me. Two issues on the quality are as follows you only get lossless on a laptop with the Chrome browser and also there is an increase in buffering the music. I’ve played the same music CD with Spotify’s 320kbps Ogg Vorbis compressed format and there is a difference, in more complex tracks in particular, vocals are similar. With Tidal on my Asus laptop, using Chrome, I have played a CD back to back with Tidal and it is very difficult to tell the difference with the above mentioned Vitus DAC. As always we are the mercy of the recording process, the mixing and production in the studio, not to mention loudness. If you have the correct equipment, for example a lossless source into a Vitus DAC RCD-100 versus a Densen B440 CD into the same pre and power amplifier setup with some top cables there really isn’t much discernible difference between the two formats, FLAC should be at least as good as a CD in my ears at any rate. If you have the equipment, for example, a Michel Tecnodec, new vinyl really can sound the best CDs are great, manageable and accessible and on the right equipment are a joy streamed files, if your bandwidth is good and your wifi is stable, are limited only by the equipment you have and >Am I going to switch for twice the price, let’s see? Losslessįirstly, I wanted to briefly comment on the FLAC (Free Lossless Audio Codec) versus compressed issue that elicits such fervent debate over coffee and dinner tables alike. The user interfaces, so far, on my Android, this iPad and my laptop have been excellent and very intuitive. I have so far found Tidal to be a revelation, in terms of audio quality and new ‘curated music’. ![]() I have the right streaming equipment, including a Naim Uniti2 and a T+A Cala in the kitchen. I’m currently running through the ‘1001albums you must listen to before you die’ so the Spotify catalogue is good so far. I’m a Spotify Premium customer of long standing, so I’ve been shelling out £9.99 per month for a while now. It also offers a video streaming service with access to 75,000 videos, an area I have not particularly explored in this review. Tidal is a new lossless streaming platform that offers an audiophile experience that is at least CD quality with access to, reputedly, 25 million tracks. ![]()
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