I have no idea if this stuff would work for you. I wouldn't dream of listening to music as you do, but then that's your preference.

I spent a good deal of the afternoon playing around with "L'Art du Son." First I played a given track on a disc (mostly CD's, but a few SACD's as well), then treated the disc and played the same passage again. In each and every case, there was a demonstrable difference, especially on older discs. In many cases, as I played the treated program, a big smile came across my face, as if I were almost listening to the piece for the first time. That's how much difference this stuff can make. I even applied it to a Telarc SACD that specifically warns against using any liquid cleaner and/or anti-static agent, and it still made an improvement.

This morning I asked a friend of mine at church services (a Grammy-winning, professional recording engineer) how L'Art du Son could possibly work. His explanation was that it might be doing the same thing to discs insofar as error correction as what's done to starburst holes in a car's windshield when they're fixed by injecting a particular substance inot the hole so as not to allow it to enlarge into a crack. Seems like a fair analogy, but again, it's anyone's guess.

I will never listen to another CD or SACD without first applying L'Art du Son. (And, I'm NOT getting paid to say this either!)