February 5th, 2025
Joe Nino-Hernes' Digitally Sourced "Katy Lied" Says "Re-do Them All!" all of the lower cost digitally remastered Dan albums should have sounded this good By: Michael FremerUntil Katy Lied, the "commercial" $29.99 Steely Dan reissues were cut using Bernie Grundman mastered digital files. All of the previous Dan albums therefore should have sonically resembled the UHQR 45rpm versions issued by Analogue Productions. None did. All sounded D.O.A. They were cut by a lesser known, let's say "second tier" Long Island, N.Y. based mastering engineer. Was the problem the quality of his cutting system? After all, a lacquer... Read More
Comments: 18February 5th, 2025
From Roundabouts to The Sunrise - The Tale of Yes’ “Fragile”; the perfect pressing of a prog rock classic By: Dylan PegginBy 1971, Yes had became synonymous with "progressive rock". After executing an array of rearranged covers and hybrids of blues and jazz on its first two albums (Yes and Time and a Word), the release of The Yes Album laid down the foundation for the group's “golden run”, which ran up until the mid-1970s. Tracks like “Yours Is No Disgrace,” “Starship Trooper,” and “I’ve Seen All Good People” were quick to become repertoire staples of their now 50+ year... Read More
Comments: 9January 31st, 2025
Steely Dan's Controversial 'Katy Lied' Gets the Analogue Productions UHQR Treatment tried and true, or something new? By: Michael FremerOnce upon a time, when great recording studios were a “thing”, long before they became almost extinct—when no one thought such a thing was even possible—studio owners and sound conscious musicians competed with one another to find new and improved recording technology.“Improved” came in many guises, some of which turned out to be worse. For instance, in the mid-1970s, the Aphex Aural Exciter grabbed the attention of both studio owners and musicians. It did what the... Read More
Comments: 51January 25th, 2025
The Dawn of a New Era in Berlin A Deluxe Vinyl Set celebrates the Beginning of the Kirill Petrenko partnership with the Berlin Philharmonic Orchestra By: Mark Ward
Repertoire both familiar and welcomingly unfamiliar is put through its paces by this nascent collaboration between one of the world’s top orchestras with its dynamic new Chief Conductor. This gorgeously appointed set is not only a compelling snapshot of a new musical era at the Philharmonie, it’s also a great way for classical novices to introduce themselves to an eclectic range of music in first-rate performances.
Read More Comments: 14January 17th, 2025
King Crimson Left a Progressive Rock Legacy With “Red” 50th anniversary release includes new stereo and elemental mixes By: Dylan PegginThere's a misconception among some that King Crimson was Robert Fripp centered around a revolving door of personnel. The group's ever-changing style followed a new age philosophy of the music finding its players, leading to constant reinvention and being purely progressive. By the mid-1970s, King Crimson’s third lineup consisted of guitarist Robert Fripp, bassist/vocalist John Wetton, violinist David Cross, and percussionist Bill Bruford. This incarnation’s... Read More
Comments: 15January 15th, 2025
Rudy Van Gelder Records IN STEREO Gary Davis "One of the Last of a Long Line of Religious Street Singers" (REVISED REVIEW) a stirring record that surely influenced more commercial folksters By: Michael FremerThe jacket is for a mono record so guess what? I played this record using a mono cartridge. Someone, (I thought in a comment but now I don't see it) claimed the recording was in stereo so upon returning from a trip to Seattle I played it using a stereo cartridge and? Yes, it's a fine stereo recording! Fine in that RVG kept it "natural", using stereo simply to produce space. Collapsing it to mono either with a mono cartridge or a "mono"... Read More
Comments: 14January 8th, 2025
Donny Hathaway's Self-Titled Second LP Reissued at 45 rpm in Atlantic 75 series By: Joseph W. Washek1971 was a pivotal year for R&B/soul music. Stevie Wonder's Where I'm Coming From was released in April. Marvin Gaye's What's Going On was released in May. Maggot Brain by Funkadelic was released in July, Curtis Mayfield's Curtis in September, and Sly's There's a Riot Goin’ On in November. All of these albums were entirely composed of original music and expressed the disappointment, despair, and anger of young Black people living... Read More
Comments: 4January 8th, 2025
A Journey to Satori: 53 Years In The Making A deep dive on Flower Travellin' Band and their 1971 breakout psych classic By: Michael JohnsonIn 2019 Yuya Uchida, the father of rock & roll in Japan, passed away at age 79. Uchida was not an instrumentalist, and he never found fame as a singer, but his fingerprint was on much of the guitar-driven music infecting Japan from the late 1950s through the early 1970s. After a brief career releasing some early Elvis-inspired rock and roll singles at the dawn of the 60s, his passion was reinvigorated when the Beatles came to Tokyo in 1966 to perform five nights... Read More
Comments: 4January 6th, 2025
The Velvet Underground Strived for Hits on “Loaded” Analogue Productions’ reissue is "loaded" with sonic sweetness By: Dylan PegginOf all the '60s era artists that expanded their craft to unfathomable heights, The Velvet Underground was arguably the most adventurous. Few if any other contemporaries sought to work in unorthodox approaches to both instrumentation (drones, detuned guitars, and distortion) and subject matter (drug use, S&M, and prostitution). These approaches appear prominently on their first two albums, The Velvet Underground & Nico and White Light/White Heat. A key... Read More
Comments: 2January 6th, 2025
Bill Evans' Best Studio Album The 1961 "Explorations" gets its best vinyl treatment By: Fred KaplanThe trio of pianist Bill Evans, bassist Scott LaFaro, and drummer Paul Motian is one of the most influential in jazz, yet the group laid down just three recording sessions over an 18-month period from December 1959 till June 1961--two studio sets (which formed two separate albums, Portrait in Jazz and Explorations) and one live date (spread out over two albums, Waltz for Debby and Sunday Afternoon at the Village Vanguard). The live albums, which rank as the best... Read More
Comments: 9January 4th, 2025
A Little Touch of L.C. Franke in The Night? though a collection of winning originals, not covers By: Michael FremerReading the press release while listening to this effervescent, ornately orchestrated instantly likable set of new, yet nostalgic tunes, it wasn't surprising to discover that modern day "crooner" L.C. Franke's musical roots at least for this record were anchored in his grandmother Elsie's "dusty" record collection (crooner in quotes because his singing style is more straightforward, though the tunes and arrangements could be used by... Read More
Comments: 0December 30th, 2024
A Front Row Seat at the Corner of Forlorn and Regret With Gillian Welch and David Rawlings in "you are there" spectacularly natural sound By: Michael FremerRarely does regret sound so affirming, loss so found, emptiness so filling, distance so near and dated so au courant as do those dark sentiments on this collection of woe filled songs that though relentlessly morose, somehow bring to the listener peace and resolve.Though the Welch/Rawlings musical style remains fixed in mountain balladry and many of the themes are timeless, there's modernity too in "Hashtag"—an unrelentingly down road song about chasing... Read More
Comments: 25December 28th, 2024
The Album That Never Was But Should Have Been Finally Is Short on duration long on musical value By: Michael FremerImagine a young Miles Davis fan's excitement back in 1973 spying a new compilation titled BASIC MILES The Classic Performances of Miles Davis (C32025) only to find that it was a seemingly haphazardly chosen set of tracks, and worse, that the asterisked ones had been "Electronically Re-Recorded to Simulate Stereo". But reading the discography on the jacket before putting it back in the bin, the second track "Stella By Starlight" listed the... Read More
Comments: 7December 23rd, 2024
Sing and Dance with Frank Sinatra (updated with comments from producer/annotator Charles Granata) A Neglected Album is finally restored to its rightful place as one of Sinatra's masterpieces. By: Paul Seydor
Impex Records releases a new 1step, 45-rpm remastering of Sing and Dance with Frank Sinatra, one of Sinatra's most important albums yet one that is often neglected despite the fact that it occupies a watershed place in his development as a singer and recording artist.
Read More Comments: 14December 21st, 2024
"Long After Dark" Emerges From the "Damn the Torpedoes" Shadows the "in-betweener" gets a revised look By: Michael FremerIn old school animation—the way Disney and Warner Brothers did it way back when— rough drawings of the action were sketched on paper by the animators, who then flipped through the pages to see what they've drawn come to rough life. Once these roughs met with their approval they handed them off to secondary animators usually referred to as "in-betweeners" who produced the drawings that go in between what the animators hand them, thus producing the... Read More
Comments: 15December 21st, 2024
Resistance Music - Shostakovich from Berlin During Lockdown Music-Making of Searing Intensity on the Berlin Philharmonic’s In-House Label By: Mark Ward
This beautifully designed and annotated set appeals to seasoned classical collectors and newbies alike with its gripping performances of three of the master symphonist’s most compelling works in outstanding sound and video. Amidst all the tinsel and seasonal levity, give this set serious consideration.
Read More Comments: 11December 21st, 2024
Analogue Productions Serves a "Smokin'" Piece of Humble Pie! A long out-of-print audiophile reissue gets repressed By: Dylan PegginWhether the members of Cream were considered “cream of the crop” players or ELP debuting before a crowd of 600,000 at the Isle of Wight, supergroups became a hot-button commodity that granted success in the late 1960s. Although Humble Pie may have included members of Small Faces, The Herd, Spooky Tooth, and the Apostolic Intervention, they were keen to distance themselves from any preconceived connotations by the music press. The foursome established a sound rooted in... Read More
Comments: 2December 18th, 2024
The Great Artistry of Django Reinhardt Sam Records reissues electric Django in Artisan Series By: Joseph W. WashekThe years after the liberation of France from German occupation in August 1944 were not easy ones for the great guitarist Django Reinhardt. Somehow, during the occupation, he had managed to remain in France and continue to play professionally with great success and even record while hundreds of thousands of fellow members of the Romany ethnic group were murdered by the Nazis.After the war, he and violinist Stephane Grapelli, on several occasions, the last in 1948, had... Read More
Comments: 18