Tape and analog!
Mallets, Melody and Mayhem: Columbia LP
Any cut in particular? Side 1 or Side 2. Mine would be Side 2, cuts 3 and 4. Canon for Percussion and Parade. I have a 'Demo Copy' Stereo 6 eye.
Tape and analog!
Mallets, Melody and Mayhem: Columbia LP
With regards to the brewing digital vs. analog sparing starting in the thread
Lately, I've been using Michael Hedges 'Aerial Boundaries' LP to demo my system to visitors.
Will do. I have gotten the bass a little better since your visit. I'm pretty darn happy with the system overall.
Sean
Lately, I've been using Michael Hedges 'Aerial Boundaries' LP to demo my system to visitors. I was playing this as warm up music and eventually leading to some M&K D2Ds like Fatha and For Duke, and after the that, my visitor said to me, what's that first guitar album you played? I want to buy that.
Dre-I'm still thinking about it, but I promise I will post my thoughts. I have some ideas for sure. In the old days, it would have been the standard list of audiophile chestnuts, but not now. If you ever do make it to Bloomington and manage to come to my house, aside from a great meal and the beverage()s of your choice, I'm pretty sure that within my collection of music I will have plenty of things to put a smile on your face.
And Dre, I hope you have seen some of the jazz LPs I have mentioned here on WBF as being outstanding music and recordings (IMO of course). I would pretty much put most of my jazz LPs in the "must hear" category.
Any cut in particular? Side 1 or Side 2. Mine would be Side 2, cuts 3 and 4. Canon for Percussion and Parade. I have a 'Demo Copy' Stereo 6 eye.![]()
Looking forward to my next trip to the great northwest.
Dre
fwiw, aerial bounderies is DDD. michael hedges was one of the most copied (and revered) acoustic guitar players of the '80s early nineties (see youtube for endless ragamuffin covers). i feel fortunate to have seen him play montezuma hall at SDSU eons ago. RIP michael.
You know… If I were a moderator, I’d ask that we please try to stick with the Ops original intent for this thread.
And if I were in the mood to have my ears bleed, I'd listen to some '80s digital gear.
Sorry. I did try to make sure my posts were civil and non-personal, and were vaguely on topic by mentioning that one's choice of source might influence how well the system was flexed, and hence how impressive one's visitors found it. But you're right: the debate should go on elsewhere.
Here's some digital.
...Crown Imperial Dallas Wind Symphony. RR HRX 176.4/24
For good measure, I'm going to add another LP and that would be Sonny Rollins "Way out West." Pick a song, any song, and you can't go wrong (and yeah, I'm a poet too). Seriously, this entire recording sounds great and blows me away. I bragged on this recording on this forum years ago and had some digital naysayers who never owned and never heard the Analog Productions version tell me that the recording was "just OK" and "nothing special." Sorry, they are dead wrong. This recording is something special and I still feel like it is something special every time I listen to it. It still blows me away that this recording was made in 1957. There is a reason that I said this recording should be a mandatory listening requirement for all wannabe recording engineers so they can hear what was laid down in 1957 with primitive reel to reel gear, tube microphones, and tube playback electronics and judge their recording abilities and how they are advancing the state of the art accordingly. Good luck with that.
First, that wasn't Phoebe Snow as far as I know. I think it was Alicia Bridges, and I am unaware that Ms. Snow covered that song. If you are saying that Phoebe reminds you of that, well, I can't help you there, Mep.
Ms. Snow was more of a folk-pop singer, who had a huge hit with Poetry Man, but had a bunch of other songs that were quite good. She is still, perhaps, an acquired taste, so i'm not going to try to convince you otherwise.
Now, you ******, I have that stupid disco song stuck in my head. What's that called, when a song gets stuck in your brain?
Ugh!
Bill. I stand corrected. You are right. The song I was thinking of was sung by Alicia Bridges so therefore I'm wide open to getting some Phoebe Snow music.
Absolutely agreed. It will cost you an arm and a leg, but an original pressing kicks the crap out of the Analogue Productions.
You may want to track down an original of "Gettin' Together" or "Smack Up!" by Art Pepper on Contemporary. The Contemporary recordings are amongst the best sounding in my library...I've literally had people slack jawed when I tell them the records are originals and over 50 years old!
You might also like "Sonny Rollins and The Contemporary Leaders"...
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I think saying the originals kick the reissues in the ass is a little bit of an overstatement. I've done comparisons of a number of the original black label Contemporary vs. the AP and while there's a difference, the AP sound damn good. To wit The Poll Winners 45 rpm transfer is very, very good. And the AP on average were better transfers than say the Classic LPs were of titles.
OTOH, try and find a Contemporary (or for that matter any) jazz LP in good shape. Rots of ruck. I'd say my return rate for jazz LPs was around 80-90 pct. until hooked up with some better dealers. Jazz collectors actually played their LPs to death; classical lovers seem to have played them once and then put the album on the shelf. But even then it's a crap shoot vs. getting say original classical lps. The biggest thing that I currently look for in the picture of an LP online is wear around the spindle hole.
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