Kuoppis
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- Joined
- Jan 19, 2015
- Messages
- 5,203
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- #1
Some time ago I found out that I somehow like the sound of the Qobuz streaming service. So, I decided to switch from Tidal to Qobuz after nearly a decade with the former.
A couple of other things also suit my preferences with the Qobuz business model. One thing was that there are genuine high-res versions of lots of albums I listen to. Another thing is that with a Sublime annual subscription I have the option to buy DL versions of albums at a reduced price. This is indeed what I regularly do if I particularly like something.
So, for some time I ran both services in parallel, but then recently decided to discontinue using Tidal altogether. Doing this I transferred my library from Tidal to Qobuz, and also culled albums I had put in the library but never come back to. There were a couple of interesting things I found out:
1) Not all material is equally available on both services. Switching from Tidal to Qobuz there were 5-10 albums out of >6K I did not find on the latter. I bought (or already had) CDs or DL versions of those. But I presume it would have been the same the other way around.
2) I also found that there is significantly more true high-res material on Qobuz than Tidal
- a lots of classic jazz albums are available in 192K in Qobuz, while the pendant in Tidal is only 44.1K
- in terms of high-res, often the Tidal version is 44.1/16 MQA, while in Qobuz there is at least a 44.1/24 version available, or even an 88K, 96K or 192K alternative
- if there is a ‘high-res’ version in Tidal, it typically is a MQA variant of what’s available in FLAC from Qobuz, e.g. MQA 96K vs. 96K FLAC
- I also noticed that a significant amount of albums I have added in Tidal over the years were downgraded to AAC - I have never personally added any AAC album to my library
Any similar observations by others?
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A couple of other things also suit my preferences with the Qobuz business model. One thing was that there are genuine high-res versions of lots of albums I listen to. Another thing is that with a Sublime annual subscription I have the option to buy DL versions of albums at a reduced price. This is indeed what I regularly do if I particularly like something.
So, for some time I ran both services in parallel, but then recently decided to discontinue using Tidal altogether. Doing this I transferred my library from Tidal to Qobuz, and also culled albums I had put in the library but never come back to. There were a couple of interesting things I found out:
1) Not all material is equally available on both services. Switching from Tidal to Qobuz there were 5-10 albums out of >6K I did not find on the latter. I bought (or already had) CDs or DL versions of those. But I presume it would have been the same the other way around.
2) I also found that there is significantly more true high-res material on Qobuz than Tidal
- a lots of classic jazz albums are available in 192K in Qobuz, while the pendant in Tidal is only 44.1K
- in terms of high-res, often the Tidal version is 44.1/16 MQA, while in Qobuz there is at least a 44.1/24 version available, or even an 88K, 96K or 192K alternative
- if there is a ‘high-res’ version in Tidal, it typically is a MQA variant of what’s available in FLAC from Qobuz, e.g. MQA 96K vs. 96K FLAC
- I also noticed that a significant amount of albums I have added in Tidal over the years were downgraded to AAC - I have never personally added any AAC album to my library
Any similar observations by others?
Sent from my iPad using Tapatalk