hey everyone --
i'm headed to the baltics to see my friend singing in a concert and wanted to archive the experience on a decent hand-held audio device for my own personal use. i've previously tried using my creative zen MP3 player for such things, but the recording was poor quality - infact, terrible. i'm no pro at sound recording so just want something that is easy to use and will do the job of giving a good sound quality on playback....can anyone make some suggestions on devices?
many thanks and i hope you are all well! 
ingrid
The biggest impacts on recording quality (assuming you are using a digital recorder) are generally -
1. Microphone placement. If you can get close to a performance it's going to sound generally great. The mics on recorders also will have a particular arrangement that will affect the stereo image. A $5000 rig in a bad location is going to sound worse than a $300 recorder in a great location.
2. Microphone type/design. If the mic is hissy it will suck during quiet parts.
3. Mic pre-amplifier quality. If the mic preamp is hissy it will suck during the quiet parts.
4. Digital recorder quality. Most D/A converters are all but indistinguishable for most field-recording applications.
Generally any digital recorder fed a good quality signal is going to do a good job. The questions to ask yourself is do you want your mics on the recorder or separate?
If you are looking for an on-the-recorder solution then 1 to 4 above become correlated, I would suggest you check out...
1. Sony D-50
http://digitalmedia.oreilly.com/2008/01/10/sony-pcm-d50-recorder-review.html 2. Zoom H4n
http://www.samsontech.com/products/productpage.cfm?prodID=19943. Edirol R09HR
http://www.edirol.net/products/en/R-09HR/The nice thing about any of these is that they will all make great recordings when you get the placement right. Later you can always add external mics/preamps and up the quality to full pro, these recorders won't limit you.
I use a Sound Devices MixPre + Edirol R09HR + Professional mics OR some
cheapie binaural mics I made myself (direct into the R09HR), for capturing field-recordings in public spaces where stealth/mobility is required. I don't use the internal mics much, although
this field-recording does and sounds great IMO.
digifish