August 20th, 2024
Josh Moshier Explores the Semi-Permanent An Interview and Review About His First Solo Album - "Semipermanence" - and Composing Career By: Evan TothToday, it’s rare to discover music without any prior knowledge of it. We usually have some vague sense of the genre, sound, or artist. But, I had no idea what to expect from Joshua Moshier before the needle hit his debut album’s grooves. It quickly became clear to me that Moshier is an exceptionally talented musician. And I further learned that he’s an Emmy-nominated composer, songwriter, and pianist who has crafted music for series, films, interactive media, and the... Read More
Comments: 2August 19th, 2024
Our Man In Japan Covers the Recent Tokyo Audio Fair Good music and good vibes By: Tracking AngleOur man in Japan, whose website is Rice Field Records took in the recent Tokyo Audio Fair and produced this video report. The show always has a great vibe. Attendees are respectful and most often want to hear classical music and good jazz. The presentations are useful too. Enjoy! Read More
Comments: 0August 17th, 2024
Injection Molded Records Are Here! listen and compare the same title pressed two ways By: Michael Fremer(There's NEW AUDIO attached to the video below). The German company Sonopress last year announced that it was developing an injection molded vinyl record production process, calling the resulting record an "EcoRecord". The environmentally friendly process is similar to how optical media like laserdiscs, CDs, DVDs and Blu-ray discs are manufactured (Sonopress developed 4K Ultra HD Blu-ray technology). With optical disc popularity giving way to streaming... Read More
Comments: 16August 16th, 2024
J.R. Boisclair and I Visit "The Audiophile Junkie" and Explain Pros and Cons of Tangential vs. Pivoted Arms Audiophile Junkie is not a vinyl guy but we felt obligated to clarify By: Michael FremerOur friend Charles Kirmuss appeared on The Audiophile Junkie YouTube channel recently and claimed the superiority of tangential tracking arms without explaining the negatives. There are positives and negatives to everything in this hobby so J.R. and I asked to make a joint guest appearance to "cavitate" the situation.The video is below. The comments so far are interesting. My favorite is this one: "Excellent information. Very enjoyable. I sent this... Read More
Comments: 17August 16th, 2024
"Quick Drop" Doors "L.A. Woman" 33 1/3 UHQR From Analogue Productions limited to 4500 copies, packaged in new style box + die cut direct to board jacket By: Tracking AngleKind of a "surprise drop" from Analogue Productions. Bernie Grundman mastered from original analog tape at 33 1/3, AAA all the way, pressed on 200g UHQR Clarity vinyl. New packaging, plus die-cut direct to board jacket duplicates the original. One of the best Doors albums and possibly the best sounding as well. Read More
Comments: 14August 15th, 2024
Early "Daze" Neil & Crazy Horse with Jack Nitzsche Is a Great Horse Compilation yes, mostly for hardcore fans By: Michael FremerIt seems like the only notifications in my inbox that come more often than Democratic Party money begs are Warner Records announcements of new Neil Young Archive releases. It's hard to keep up and so many are so good. Very little filler. There are 198 tracks in the upcoming Archives Vol. III (1976-1987) and I'v been sorting through that, though there won't be vinyl. Understandable! This recent one deserves your attention if you're a true Neil and... Read More
Comments: 4August 15th, 2024
Robinson's "Smokey" Reissue Doesn't Smolder Elemental Music Takes on Motown Classics, Smokey's Solo Debut is in the First Batch By: Evan TothBarcelona-based Elemental Music has secured a significant deal with Motown Records to reissue a selection of classic albums from the iconic label's catalog. Dubbed the Motown Sound Collection, the series will feature over twenty titles. Jordi Soley, the founder of Elemental Music and producer of the project, explains, “For many of the albums that we’ll be putting out throughout 2024 and into 2025, it will be their first reissue since their original release.... Read More
Comments: 0August 15th, 2024
A Swinging Quarter Century Old Jazz Vocal Album' Premier Vinyl Release recorded in 1998 to two inch analog tape By: Michael FremerThis album arrived in the mail featuring jazz vocalist Teri Roiger, her husband and bassist John Menegon, both unfamiliar to me, plus always a joy to enjoy, Jack DeJohnette and Kenny Burrell (drums and guitar, but you already knew that). How this session happened—have DeJohnette and Burrell ever played together previously or ever again?—I don't know. But once I played it and heard Roiger's vocals I think I understood why those two did the gig, why I needed... Read More
Comments: 0Two recent connections provided the perfect opening for this review. One was from a guy I'd not heard from in more than twenty five years. He'd visited my basement listening space but I don't recall the circumstances. Contacting me via LinkedIn, he wrote, "I don’t think I’ve ever heard a system and room as gorgeous as your Glen Rock room. Not the recording studios I’ve been in. Not the radio station rooms I’ve broadcast from in years past. I can’t... Read More
Comments: 12August 12th, 2024
DS Audio DS W3 Optical Phono Cartridge Dave McNair explores the lastest offering from DS Audio By: Dave McNairThe Japanese firm DS Audio has been on a mission to revive and massively improve optical-based cartridges since CEO Tetsuaki Aoyagi introduced the DS Audio W1 in early 2014, updating Toshiba's optical cart concept from the 1970s. The DS W3 model I’m reviewing here is considered one of the company’s third-generation designs and incorporates many improvements taken from the top-of-the-line Grand Master Ex, Grand Master, and DS Master 3.(Editor's note: I... Read More
Comments: 1August 12th, 2024
Because Sound Matters - Hear Linkin Park As Never Before Warner Records taps into the audiophile market By: Dylan PegginOne-step vinyl pressings continue to fixate both self-described audiophiles and the uninitiated who are curious about the wonders of great sound. These pressings eliminate two of the three steps in traditional vinyl manufacturing (creating the father and mother), thus bringing out more detail from the source material and less surface noise. Audiophiles tend to agree that the results are sonically worth the added cost.Warner Records' Because Sound Matters label... Read More
Comments: 0August 11th, 2024
dCS Launches Varèse Music System the present day Vivaldi Apex refuses to die By: Michael FremerOn August 7th dCS launched its Varèse Music System, characterizing it as a product that embodies "our boldest ideas, realized" and naming it for the French experimental composer who invented the term "organized sound" and who famously said "What is music but organized noises?" The late Frank Zappa was among his most ardent Baby Boomer generation fans and promoters.The new Varèse Music System consists of a multiple task pre-DAC Core that... Read More
Comments: 5August 9th, 2024
At Its New Soho Technica House, Audio Technica Debuts the new AT-ART1000x "Direct Power" Phono Cartridge replaces the original AT-ART1000 By: Michael FremerAt Audio Technica's new SoHo-based Technica House, described by the company as "a shared space of collaboration and inspiration, celebrating the Japanese aesthetic and Audio-Technica's analog philosophy" Audio Technica's chief engineer for cartridge design, Yosuke Koizumi explained the changes made to the original AT-ART1000 "Direct Power" moving coil cartridge introduced in 2016 and designed by company veteran and even back then... Read More
Comments: 17August 9th, 2024
Pass Labs X260.8 Monoblock Amplifiers Well Mannered .... Time Tested Sound By: Ken RedmondI can already hear you asking, "Ken, why are you reviewing a product introduced in 2014?" Good question. It is rare to find an audio component design with a lifespan of over ten years in today's industry, and I am intrigued by the longevity of this product series. While much has been written about various Point 8 amplifiers and industry legend Nelson Pass, this review will cover the amplifier's sound quality and explore the reasons behind Pass... Read More
Comments: 4August 9th, 2024
Our Man in Tokyo Visits the Recent 2024 Tokyo International Audio Show here's the first part of his multipart video coverage By: Tracking AngleOur man in Tokyo Michael Schoolnik went to the recent Tokyo International Audio Show and shot some footage you'll enjoy watching. And here are some timings.0:00 Intro0:25 Accuphase2:05 Ortofon3:24 Luxman5:12 Sforzato6:43 Triode9:08 Esoteric10:20 McIntosh Read More
Comments: 0August 9th, 2024
Karajan, Bruckner, and the Next Generation of Deutsche Grammophon’s Original Source Series - Part 3: “The Force Awakens” - Unleashing Bruckner In a Listening Room Near You A Deep Dive into the History and Technology behind this Epic AAA Reissue, mastered and cut directly from the 8-track master tapes By: Mark Ward
In Part 3 of this extended analysis and review of the new Karajan cycle of Bruckner’s 9 Symphonies - remixed, remastered and cut directly from the original 8-track master tapes to vinyl by Emil Berliner Studios - I survey the remastered cycle as a whole, as well as examine how the digital recordings of Symphonies 1-3 were sonically refurbished. (You can read Part 1 here, and Part 2 here).
Read More Comments: 19August 9th, 2024
Joni Mitchell Archives Vol. 4 Culls Unreleased Material From Her Most Innovative 1976-1980 Time Mitchell curated wide-ranging 6 CD/4 LP box set By: Tracking AnglePress release: LOS ANGELES — Throughout the latter half of the seventies, Joni Mitchell continued to creatively break ground with her fearless and fluid exploration of jazz. Rather than tread the same path, she challenged and reinvented her style with a folk fusion like no other. Ascending to an unrivaled sonic peak, this innovative sound took shape across the gold-certified Hejira [1976], the gold-certified double-LP Don Juan’s Reckless Daughter[1977], her... Read More
Comments: 1August 8th, 2024
David Murray Teams Up with Questlove (and analog tape) The jazz master saxophonist stretches out with new improv-mates By: Fred KaplanDavid Murray was the tenor saxophonist of the 1980s and ‘90s, first as junior member of the World Saxophone Quartet, among the most innovative jazz groups of the era, then as leader of a dozen different ensembles of varying size, from duets to big band and everything in between, playing a range of music (much of it self-composed) from frenzied avant-garde to swooning ballads, his solos sweeping arpeggios in pleasingly jarring intervals laced with Sapphiric blue notes,... Read More
Comments: 0