A "master recording" means that the source for the LP is the original master tape. It is common for record companies to use safety masters, which are copies made from the master, or other copies, which are ,at the minimum, one generation away from the master, as source material. Interestingly, there are many records where the masters have vanished completely, or degraded to the point where they are unusable, and only dupes exist. I recently bought a Chet Baker set, where no tapes could be located at all for one of the albums, and that album is taken from a record that has been played back. So you can actually hear the ticks and pops of the record that they used as source material. I think that I have some Django Reinhart discs like this as well.
New LP with pops + crackle, What is expected?
I just purchased two LP's from Acoustic Sounds. A original master recording of Verse by Patricia Barber (45 rpm). The other was Big whiskey by Dave Mathews Band (33 rpm).
Well Dave Mathews is perfectly quite while the other has occasional irritating background sounds. I do not want to be a difficult customer but I am inclined to return it. Recently I had to replace Pop Pop by Rickie Lee Jones because of similar defects. What level of imperfections are we expected to except with new vinyl issues? (p.s.) the store has never given me any troubles exchanging LP's in the past and will most likely not this time.
What does everyone think?
Well Dave Mathews is perfectly quite while the other has occasional irritating background sounds. I do not want to be a difficult customer but I am inclined to return it. Recently I had to replace Pop Pop by Rickie Lee Jones because of similar defects. What level of imperfections are we expected to except with new vinyl issues? (p.s.) the store has never given me any troubles exchanging LP's in the past and will most likely not this time.
What does everyone think?
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- 15 posts total
- 15 posts total

