Dang, three high-and-inside fast balls!
Not all masters are multitrack and thus you can't make that generalization.
True, but when talking about high-resolution audio don't you think it is a fair assumption that they are using multi-track studio tape masters?
The term for mixing multitrack session tapes to stereo is mixing, not compressing.
After years of working with Logic, I was taught that the term used to combine several tracks into mono or stereo is "bounce;" it is also a standard term in audio. Likewise, "mixing" was a term used to described the process of shaping the overall sound of the project by adjusting vol levels, panning, messing with the EQ, and using other effects on the project. But, being half brain dead and suffering from tip-of-the-tongue phenomenon at the time of the writing, all I could think of was compression, which actually deals with the "attack" and "release" in audio. So, I used the computer file definition of compression and related it to making a file smaller as in going from a huge multi-track project to a smaller file like an AIFF.
A bad master tape will not have lathe rumble.
Oops, forgot a word--perceived. 'The
perceived "rumble" you hear is probably the result of a poor quality master tape.' In other words, I was questioning if the perceived "rumble" was some other sound on the tape and was being mistaken as "rumble." In any case, I was suggesting that the poor sound was due to the tape.
Personally, I do not see how a company like HDTracks could burn "hi-res" audio off of vinyl and re-sale it as being "remastered." There are some crappy re-masterings out there, but they usually seem to be casualties of the "loudness wars," or as if someone went out for coffee and put the process on auto-pilot and allowed over clipping to take place.
@earwaxer: I got my hybrid two hybrid SACDs the other day. Looks like SACD uses the same licensing scheme as HDMI does. Ergo, SACD audio can only be played through analog outs. As soon as I change the output to my SPDIF or optical the player reverts to CD mode. Then it is in big print in the manual that "SACD can only be used with analog outs." Bad news is that one is reduced to using the DAC in the SACD player, but if one wanted a better DAC then there are always the high-end CD/SACD players available. So, I was unable to see if there is a much difference in down-sampling from 96 to 44. The good news is that I can still burn the Redbook CD to my hard drive.