Dac to remove Digital Glare/ edge


What is the best Dac to remove digital glare/ edge on highly compressed 80's Rock and roll

In looking for help in the 2-7k hz frequency range

or another way.

A Dac to make crappy albums sound acceptable in the highs

do the filters do this? Or ?

jeff

frozentundra
CAL Alpha with a nice set of NOS tubes. Canare digital cable is a very good cable that I feel is not too revealing but gets the job done just fine.
frozentundra
What is the best Dac to remove digital glare/ edge on highly compressed 80’s Rock and roll
The very early Marantz that were 14bit rez only were good for doing this, nothing seemed to phase them. But you do lose detail.
Philips TDA1540 dac chip was 14bit. The Philips CD104 and Marantz CD74 used them, and many more probably.

If you download this massive list, and then use the search you'll find over 100 units that used the TDA1540 Audio Research among them.
http://vasiltech.narod.ru/CD-Player-DAC-Transport.htm  

Cheers George

A lot of CDs of pop and rock music sound terrible because the studios master them that way (deliberately or by indifference, I have no idea).  This is evident when you hear the same music released by specialty houses that sound substantially better, which proves that a poor initial recording or degradation of the master tape was not the reason for the bad reissue.  You cannot really cure this problem by manipulating the signal without introducing all sorts of other difficulties.

At best, you can do what others have suggested by looking at different cables, or try some other tweaks.  One tweak that seems to add more body to the sound and make it less harsh sounding that almost no one mentions is inserting a line level transformer in the signal path.  A one-to-one ratio transformer would do the trick.  I know that purists/ideologues will scream, but, I am not the only one who likes some a lot of "iron" in the signal path (I own a linestage with input transformers and output transformers which feed an amp with complementary input transformers).