Audiogon "RECORDINGS TO DIE FOR" list


I've been listening to some of my favorite recordings this weekend and was wondering what others on Audiogon felt were there favorites. We have all seen the Stereophile "Records to Die For", The Absolute Sounds recommended list, Music Directs' list, The Golden Ear, etc. now I'm hoping to assemble the Audiogon "Recordings To Die For". Please list your five favorite recordings, the ones you listen to over and over or play for friends. I would assume the sonic quality is excellent in that this is an audiophile site. The performance and enjoy ability should also be excellent. Please leave your top five, even if they are already chosen so we can discover the very top for the Audiogon listeners. ALSO PLEASE REFRAIN FROM CRITICIZING OTHERS OPINIONS AND JUST LEAVE YOUR FAVORITES!

August 2002: I have compiled a summary and a full printer-friendly list of all of the recommendations below.
click here to view summary
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Holly Cole's "One Trick Pony" on "Romantically Helpless Album" Grooveland LP, 45RPM.

This particular LP (45RPM version) just keeps my ears happy and smiling over and over. It's kind of pricey for a 2 LP BUT....it did not disappoint for me....worth every penny! It's like having her live performance in your room..dynamics, presence and soundstage are just to die for IMHO.
A friend just turned me onto John Hammond's 2001 Virgin Records recording "Wicked Grin", which has appeared on this list before. Fantastic blues collaboration with Tom Waits. Great production and as my friend who is a musician points out - not a misplaced note or phrase anywhere. Outstanding. My favorite discovery of the last year for both musical content and recording.
Chris Rea, Auberge
Patti Austin, The Real Me
Vehkavaara & Piltch, Mediterranean Nights
Connie Evingson, Gypsy in My Soul
Tamara Lewis, Living Down River
1. Pink Floyd "Wish You Were Here"
2. Joni Mitchell "Court And Spark"
3. Talking Heads "Remain In Light"
4. Beatles "Abbey Road"
5. Weather Report "Black Market"
Honorable Mention:
Tangerine Dream "Stratosfear"
Herbie Hancock "River: The Joni Letters"
Miles Davis "Kind Of Blue"
Santana "Borboletta"
Los Lobos "Kiko"
Dire Straits "Brothers In Arms"
Laurie Anderson "Big Science"
Paul Simon "Graceland"
The Clash "Sandinista"
For great recordings, why not follow the top mix engineers? Famous Blue Raincoat, that's George Massenburg and Frank Wolf. George also does all LInda Ronstadt/Nelson Riddle stuff. He did Joshua Judges Ruth (Lyle Lovett) and this new gal I just love, Dawn Langstroth. Check out her site, you can see him recording it IN the room with her live. Frank Wolf is still working all the time, look him up on Allmusic. Jim Anderson who is at NYU now did a lot of the Patricia Barber stuff. Diana Krall, that's Al Schmitt. He is one of the very best. Elliot Schiener, he did Fagen's Night Fly and a whole bunch of top level stuff. The Cowboy Junkie Record was done with a SoundField mic, same mic David Cheske uses on a lot of his recordings. Its a single mic with even lower phase error than a stereo pair. AMAZING imaging on so many of those Cheske records. Chuck AInlay, he does Mark Knopfler, some of the best guitar tone on record. Bill Schnee, another amazing talent. Doug Sax, he mastered Dark Side. He is the guy with Bill behind the Sheffield Labs stuff. I think you guys would have your best luck by following your favorite engineers.

I'm new to Audiogon for I am in the high end pro business. All those engineers are the folks I know, work for, talk to or sell gear to. The good ones are always doing good work. They seldom get stuck with over compressed mastering.