According to many Metallica devotees, the official version of the band's 2008 record Death Magnetic is not the one worth listening to. Upon the album's release, fan forums exploded in disgust, choked with complaints that the songs sounded shrill, distorted, ear-splitting. These listeners liked the music and the songwriting, but everything was so loud they couldn't really hear anything. There was no nuance. Their ears hurt. And these are Metallica fans—people ostensibly undeterred by extremity. But this was too much.
The consensus seemed to be that Death Magnetic was a good record that sounded like shit. That the whole thing was drastically over-compressed, eliminating any sort of dynamic range. That it had been ruined in mastering. Eventually, more than 12,000 fans signed a petition in protest of the "unlistenable" product, and a mass mail-back-a-thon of CDs commenced. The whole episode provoked a series of questions, not just about what had gone wrong with Death Magnetic but about the craft in question: What is mastering, exactly? How does it work? Beyond the engineers themselves, almost no one seems to know.
An article on sound engineering, but the real question is, people listened to Metallica after 2000?
(Score: 3, Informative) by JNCF on Wednesday May 25 2016, @01:12AM
Audio recording and playback was invented by Thomas Edison only in 1877.
Study of acoustics predates Edison which is part and parcel of recording.
Oh and:
http://boingboing.net/2011/12/15/the-worlds-first-audio-recor.html [boingboing.net]
Your statement may not contradict GP AC's. It depends on whether GP AC intended "audio recording and playback" to be one item or two. The article you linked notes that Édouard-Léon Scott de Martinville had no way to play back his recordings. If you take "audio recording and playback" as one item, whoever invents the last-to-be-invented part and combines them invents the combination of those parts.
I'm not saying anything about the history of audio recordings, just whether or not your statements are in conflict. I think you may be talking past GP AC, instead of with.