ICP Couldn't listen to the whole disc. But something a bit different is good to hear once in a while...
6,550 responses Add your response
FedEx delivered my Elusive Disc order today. Got 10% off everything and free shipping (sale ended last Monday). I bought 13 LPs on this order. Of course they won't all get played tonight but many will. Most of them I have on CD but I'm hoping the vinyl is better. Here is what I received today: Shelby Lynne/Just a Little Lovin Norah Jones/Come Away with Me Janis Ian/Breaking Silence Chicago/Chicago Transit Authority Chicago/Chicago II Chicago/Chicago V Blood,Sweat & Tears/3 Blood,Sweat & Tears/Blood,Sweat & Tears 45rpm Patricia Barber/Nightclub Patricia Barber/Cafe Blue Diana Krall/Live in Paris 45rpm Jennifer Warnes/The Hunter Ella Fitzgerald/Clap Your Hands Here comes Charley |
Gregory Alan Isakov - This Empty Northern Hemisphere (SH 156-1) |
For Albertporter or any other Crimson fan, most of my KC recordings are very poor. Steve Wilson and Robert Fripp are reissuing the KC catalogue from Robert Fripp's original master tapes both digitally and on vinyl. The recordings are superb, although they are not cheap, especially when you add shipping from England. They are available on "The Burning Shed" website. |
David Bromberg self titled first Album. Picked it up used for .77 cents along with 50 plus other gems at the same price. Most look like new. All I can say keep downloading those albums, and clearing out space. Us bottom feeders sure appreciate it. My just started vinyl collection is growing by leaps and bounds. |
We've been doing some critical listening to a set of power cords loaned to us for audition. It's always a challenge deciding on a few recordings to use. Our practice for doing this is 1) to listen critically to a selected few cuts on our system as it exists, 2) swap gear and burn in the new gear for the requisite period of time, 3) listen critically to those same selected few cuts and note what we hear, 4) switch back to our original gear, burn in again, then listen critically one more time. By the time we do this, we have a very good handle on what we're hearing. And, we always find that we've heard the same things when we compare our listening notes. So, here's the recent selected few cuts for this adventure: Klimo Open Window OW 002, Music for Barque Violin and Harpsichord: Uccelini: Son II. Son e Correnti, op4 / Banchini and Darmstadt Groove Note GRV 1043 -45rpm, Dvorak Piano Trio No. 3: Finale / Jung Trio RCA LSC 2183 -45rpm Classic Records, Ravel, Rapsodie Espagnole: Habanera / Reiner/LSO S&P Records SNP 501, Eva Cassidy, Songbird: Fields of Gold So, why this set of recordings? All are acoustic, and all are very realistically and naturally reproduced capturing well the distinctive timbre of the instruments involved. Each brings a different combination of instruments and acoustic environments. And, we know these recordings very well through many years of listening. . |
Johhny Griffin, A Blowing Session, Blue Note 1559 (Music Matters 45 rpm reissue) with Lee Moran, Hank Mobley, John Coltrane, Wynton Kelly, Paul Cambers and Art Blakey. What a fantastic line up! Dexter Gordon, A Swingin' Affair, Blue Note ST-84133 (Music Matters 45 rpm reissue). Another outstanding LP and reissue. Ravel, Rapsodie Espagnole, Reiner/CSO, RCA LSC 2183 (Classic Records 45 rpm reissue). One of the great orchestral recordings and performances, in fantastic sound quality. If you've heard and discounted the 33 rpm reissues from Classic Records, I don't blame you. But the 45 rpm reissues are entirely different and far better. Bernie Grundman had changed his mastering chain by the time he started mastering these 45s and the vast improvements in naturalness and timbral balance are immediately apparent. . |
this is a great thread...I am just starting to discover Jazz at an old age...wow...I have jumped in with both feet and have purchased a hundred albums and cd's over the last month. Digging in to late forties to early sixties styles so far. So tonight it will be: Original Columbia copy of The Jazz Messengers Hard Bop. Mulligan meets Monk The Blue Note Re-Issue Series Freddie Hubbard first spin of this LP |
Check out these three audiophile albums on the small dutch label Sound Liaison. Carmen Gomes inc. 'Torn'..best Blues ballad album ever. Poul Berner Band 'Road to Memphis'.. beautifully told Elvis Presley "saga" and Carmen Gomes inc. 'Thousand Shades of Blue'..intimacy, the band is so well recorded that you can practically reach out and touch them,and there's an absolutely haunting version of Bruce Springsteen's I'm on Fire. http://www.soundliaison.com |
Paul Berner Band: 'Road to Memphis' beautiful laid back,jazz instrumental,Elvis Tribute. If they would ever make a movie on Elvis focusing on the saga of a country boy becoming a king,this would be the soundtrack. track 6 "the Colonel" always gives me goosebumps and ads a whole new dimension to the Elvis manager Colonel Parker. http://www.soundliaison.com |
Moody Blues - A Question of Balance. Haven't played this in I don't know how many years (probably decades). Not sure when I bought it. 1970 gatefold with lyric sheet and London Records sleeve. Great sonics. Nice bass. I don't listen exclusively to vinyl. Have plenty CDs. But sometimes you really have to wonder, "digital?" - what were they thinking?! Get a lot of pleasure playing a medium from almost 40 yrs. ago. |
U2 - Achtung Baby (so hard to find) Pink Floyd - Wish You Were Here (180g new pressing, excellent) Fleetwood Mac - Fleetwood Mac (new 180g, I think it sounds better than my old first pressing, which is still in great shape) Heart - Greatest Hits The Clash - Combat Rock You know I bought a VPI 17 and sold my VPI 16, and I must say it's much easier to clean records with this thing. Easier than I thought it would be, and there's a big difference in the records. The automatic wash wand obviously does a better job than I did manually. |
New records - an embarrassment of riches. - Punch Brothers -Who's Feeling Young Now? (Nonesuch) - Duke Ellington - Blues In Orbit (Music on Vinyl reissue) - XTC - Mummer (Geffen/Virgin) - Patricia Barber - Mythologies (MFSL) These, along with the 20 year old single malt in my glass, make for a pretty nice evening. Cheers! |
Norah Jones - Come Away with Me The Police - Synchronicity Badfinger - No Dice Badfinger - Straight Up Supertramp - Even in the Quietest Moments REM - Life's Rich Pageant REM - Murmur The Commodores - Live Bad Company - Straight Shooter Talk Talk - It's My Life Smashing Pumpkins - Siamese Dream Pretenders - Pretenders II (MOFI, great new pressing) |
For sure I am not playing any recent 45's redo's of same old stuff, it's just a cynical attitude of some in the Remastering Industry to vaste more of the foreign oil and my and your money. A culture cannot be converted into obsession with impunity - when we set out to describe a sound of things musical, we have thus defined the nature of apathy towards the essence of humanity, as all music is politically suspect (Plato). In modern times we can prove this by having no high fidelity recordings of the sounds of the Omaha Beach, the battle of Stalingrad, even the Hitler's speeches are recorded somewhat lacking in bass, not to mention them being plagued with a lot of grunge. Do we need re-mastering there ? Where are those Master tapes ? Wait, there's more.... Well Cheers |
Tonight: Jan Garbarek : Esoteric Circle -Flying Fish, forget about "Folk Songs" and other NewAgey stuff by him, this is 1969 George Russell tight reign yet John McLaughlin : Extrapolation - with John Surman adding some heat Milt Buckner : Green Onions - some killer organ + piano tracks, never need to be remastered |

