divinemartyr -- << you'd have a near CD sound quality mp3, which you could later burn to cd =) >>
Nothing personal (honestly), but you obviously have no techincal training in audio electronics or acoustics, and I'm afraid your hearing is damaged from listening at high volume levels.
CD's are very quiet when there is no signal. If you knew anything about what live music and good recording was about, you would know that they just sound terrible as a recording medium for music. If they could only do as good a job of making sound as they do for quiet, they might have a respectable product.
The problem is that the kinds of distortion inherent in linear PCM (Pulse Code Modulation) is inversely proprotional to amplitude and non-harmonic in nature. Unlike any naturally occurring sound source, the distorion gets worse as the signal gets softer, and the distortion products are out of tune with the music source. These characteristics are not only un-musical, they are actually anti-musical. That is, even at very subtle levels, they work against the subjective enjoyment of the music. It probably also explains why such artifacts are not noticed in hightly synthed, distorted, atonal rhythmic drivel like rap and hiphop.
<< Some audiophiles claim vinyl is a superior format to cd's but I disagree. >>
"CD quality" is an pejorative (insult), not a compliment. Near CD quality is even worse. :Q
Analog recording systems (vinyl, tape, etc) are not flawless. However, unlike digital recording, their distortion products are typically harmonic in nature and rise with amplitude. At low levels, the distortion products do change the sound, but in the hands of a skilled recordist, the end result is musical because the added information is in tune with the music, and like your ears, it distorts as it approaches its maximum loudness.
There is lots more to say on this. One of us would have to do a search for any of my previous long posts on the subject, which I don't have time to recreate, right now. Since I already know about it, if you're really interested in how audio and music work, I suggest you do your homework.