In Heavy Rotation
August 14th, 2025
Fluance Ri71 Powered Bookshelf Speaker Is Serious "Bang For the "Buck" AMT Tweeters, 120W amp etc. By: Michael FremerFluance reps asked to meet at Munich High End this past spring and I agreed thinking it would be new turntable pitch but instead it was a request for a $399.99/pr. powered Bluetooth bookshelf loudspeaker review. Big surprise, but why not hear what's possible for $399.99? I wasn't expecting much, but got an earful!Fluance shipped a pair in walnut that were placed adjacent to our family room Panasonic plasma television (family is 2 of us, 4 dogs and 2 cats) on... Read More
Comments: 3August 14th, 2025
London/Decca Makes the Long Expected Announcement announcement covers both sides of the Atlantic By: Tracking AngleGreen Bay,Wisconsin, August 2025: The Return of a Legend – London Decca Cartridges Reborn!After a quiet three decades, the near-mythical London Decca cartridges have returned under new ownership, with a seasoned design and manufacturing team. Until recently, the cartridges’ global cult following acquired the limited production examples made available through Presence Audio. But this is not just a comeback for the existing models. Under new guidance, the London Decca... Read More
Comments: 0August 14th, 2025
Modifying The Dog: Frank Zappa’s ‘One Size Fits All’ At 50 Conceptual continuity comes to Tracking Angle: Zappaverse traveler Abigail Devoe unpacks Chris Bellman’s 50th anniversary remaster of ‘One Size Fits All.’ By: Abigail Devoe1975 was a weird year for pop music. The Captain and Tennille had the best-selling single of the year with “Love Will Keep Us Together.” Meanwhile, Neil Young was parked in the ditch, wasted at the wake on Tonight’s The Night. Just over the guardrail, Bob Dylan returned from his own surreal excursions. Queen released the biggest song of their career. While the Carpenters were snuggled up in their parent-pleasing inoffensive confections, Led Zeppelin dealt blockbuster... Read More
Comments: 7August 13th, 2025
"The Sharp Notes" Opens Record Store 9/1 In The Garden State Plaza: Paramus, NJ Music Educator, Podcaster, Tracking Angle Contributor and Musician Opens “The Sharp Notes” By: Tracking AngleFOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE—PARAMUS, NJ — Aug.11, 2025 — The sounds of vinyl will once again echo through the halls of the Westfield's Garden State Plaza with the grand opening of The Sharp Notes, a new record store owned and operated by New Jersey-based educator, musician, and music journalist Evan Toth.Located in the heart of Paramus, NJ, The Sharp Notes brings back the golden-era thrill of physical media—reimagined for 21st-century ears. The store specializes in... Read More
Comments: 8August 13th, 2025
A Transimpedance Head Amp Is A Current Affair easy step up when used with an appropriate MC cartridge By: Michael FremerJazzed by the positive review here of Ortofon's X40 moving coil cartridge, a friend asked what he should do for a step up solution. He liked his excellent sounding Graham Slee MM phono preamp and wanted to keep using it. There's nothing worse in an analog audio chain than a bad step up transformer and known good ones don't come cheap. You can take a chance on a step up transformer you find on Ebay (and admittedly I saw a few good known used ones), but... Read More
Comments: 9August 12th, 2025
The Zombies MONO MIX "Odessey and Oracle" Release Coming September 26th first time original mono mix, remastered from studio tapes, on LP since 1968 By: Tracking AngleTHE ZOMBIES, “BRITISH INVASION” PIONEERS, ANNOUNCE THE RELEASE OF THEIR ALBUM ODESSEY AND ORACLE MONO REMASTERED ON SEPTEMBER 26TH VIA BEECHWOOD PARK RECORDS LISTEN TO THE MONO REMASTERED VERSION OF“THIS WILL BE OUR YEAR” HERE Rock & Roll Hall of Fame inductees and “British Invasion” pioneers, The Zombies, today announce the release of Odessey & Oracle Mono Remastered on September 26th. The album, the first of four definitive physical reissues from their... Read More
Comments: 2August 12th, 2025
Brad Mehldau's Album About "Visionary Depressives" Offers Inspiration and Solace Plays the music of Elliott Smith By: Michael FremerOne needn't be an Elliott Smith fan or even know who he was to appreciate Brad Mehldau's rich musical examination of emotional light and darkness using the late singer/songwriter's creativity as a guide to understanding "visionary depressives" generally, and specifically Smith and his often sad and dark, but simultaneously uplifting music. Smith fans are legion, intense, and like Nick Drake, another "visionary depressive", even in... Read More
Comments: 2August 12th, 2025
All Roads Show You No Way Out Book Review: The Cars, Let The Story Be Told By: JoE Silva
Bill Janovitz's in depth history of The Cars puts the pride of Boston pop under detailed examination
Read More Comments: 2August 11th, 2025
The Mapleshade Records Story—An Audiophile Jazz Label Reborn a fascinating insider's account By: Fred KaplanMapleshade Records was a haven for jazz-loving audiophiles in the 1990s, a label that combined very good music and excellent sound quality in an era when digital—which, in its early days, usually meant lousy sound—was sweeping through the mainstream industry. Mapleshade’s proprietor-engineer, Pierre Sprey, recorded all his albums on analog tape, with austere minimalism: just two microphones (sometimes three), no processing, not even a mixing board. He stacked bricks... Read More
Comments: 9August 7th, 2025
John Curl Interviewed on Audiophile Foundation's YouTube Channel the group requested i conduct the interview By: Michael FremerThe San Francisco Audiophile Foundation recently invited me to interview John Curl—a true audio designing legend whose decades spanning career includes working for Ampex, Mark Levinson, Parasound, Constellation and many other companies as well as designing a few equally legendary products he self-marketed like the Blowtorch and Vendetta Research preamps. Phono preampfification is a particular Curl speciality.Keeping Mr. Curl on the "straight and narrow" was... Read More
Comments: 1August 6th, 2025
"Way Out West" and "Meets The Rhythm Section" Getting Analogue Productions UHQR Treatment each limited to 2,750 Numbered Copies By: Tracking Angle(Press release): Two of the most iconic West Coast jazz recordings return in definitive form: Way Out West by Sonny Rollins and Art Pepper Meets The Rhythm Section, now available as Ultra High Quality Record (UHQR) editions for pre-order via Analogue Productions. Pressed on 200-gram Clarity Vinyl at Quality Record Pressings and cut at 45 RPM for the highest fidelity possible, these limited editions—each capped at 2,750 numbered copies—are mastered AAA directly from... Read More
Comments: 5August 6th, 2025
Experience Rush’s Latter Day Glory with “The Albums 2002-2012” The final albums of Canada’s power trio get much-deserved reissues By: Dylan PegginNever deemed ‘cool’ in the eyes of the mainstream and scowled by record critics, Canadian trio Rush were the textbook definition of ‘the people’s band.’ Guitarist Alex Lifeson, drummer Neil Peart, and bassist/keyboardist/vocalist Geddy Lee were anomalies amongst contemporaries who praised rock’s lewd and lascivious side. Their body of work explored science fiction, fantasy-driven, and philosophical lyrical realms while adapting to whatever musical climate they were... Read More
Comments: 2August 5th, 2025
Sonopress and Gotta Groove Records Announce Strategic Partnership in the United States gotta groove to offer Sonopress's EcoRecords—injection molded recycled PET By: Tracking Angle
Guetersloh, Germany / Charlotte, North Carolina / Cleveland, Ohio – 4. August 2025 – Sonopress, a global leader in media manufacturing, is proud to announce a new partnership with Gotta Groove Records, a highly respected U.S.-based vinyl production company. As part of this collaboration, Gotta Groove Records will offer the innovative EcoRecord, Sonopress’s environmentally friendly LP record solution, to its customers in the United States.
Read More Comments: 1August 5th, 2025
Amina Claudine Myers' Profound Solo Meditation The veteran pianist puts out another stunning LP for Red Hook Records By: Fred KaplanAmina Claudine Myers should be a lot more famous than she is. A composer-pianist-organist-singer of spiritual depth and grand virtuosity, she has been recording, as a leader or accompanist, for nearly a half century, but mainly for small labels and as a member of an alliance—the avant-garde Association for the Advancement of Creative Musicians (AACM), which also spawned the Art Ensemble of Chicago, Henry Threadgill, Anthony Braxton, and many others—that didn’t (and... Read More
Comments: 1August 4th, 2025
The Wattson Audio Madison Amplifier Shows That Great Things Come In Small Packages A Nifty New Creation from Swiss manufacturer CH Precision By: Jacob HeilbrunnThis past May I visited the Munich High-End show for the very first and, as it turns out, last time. Next year the exhibition will take place at the beginning of June in Vienna, the city that served for centuries as the capital of the Hapsburg empire before it collapsed at the close of World War I. Despite Munich’s displacement, the mood at this year’s show was anything but funereal. I was pumped to discover a passel of enjoyable and exciting audio exhibits, including... Read More
Comments: 4August 4th, 2025
Supatrac Nighthawk Takes Pivoted Arm Design to the Next Level does step up in price equal step up in sound quality? By: Michael FremerRevisiting a rave review can be uncomfortable. Was the product as good as you’d written it was? As conceptually groundbreaking and sonically spectacular as you’d described it? You never know until you return to it, unless of course you bought it and regularly use it, and even then, sometimes after a while you say to yourself “What was I thinking?” Or that but laced with expletives.The Supatrac Blackbird Farpoint got a rave review, and I bought it, but it’s not been in... Read More
Comments: 14July 29th, 2025
Andrew Hill's "Andrew !!!" Sat on the Shelf For 4 Years Before Alfred Lion Released It damned if I know why !!! By: Michael Fremer
No doubt Andrew Hill has more fans and has sold more albums over the past decade or two than he did while he was alive. Sad but true. Why this one sat on the Blue Note shelf for 4 years after it was recorded June, 25th, 1964 is something only Alfred Lion knows but he's no longer here to tell us. |
July 28th, 2025
Wilson Audio Introduces New Sabrina V at Innovative Audio NYC replaces the Sabrina X By: Tracking AngleWilson Audio Specialties introduced the new $28,000 Sabrina V loudspeaker at a July 24th event at Innovative Audio in New York City. Long time Wilson employee--Director of Sales-- and award winning recording engineer Peter McGrath plays the music, only a bit of which is included in this video because what's the point of picking it up with Bluetooth microphones? Industry veteran and new Wilson employee Patrick Butler describes the considerable differences between... Read More
Comments: 5July 28th, 2025
“Classic Love” - A Future Longtime Classic? The new EP from Philadelphia’s self-described ‘constant hitmaker’ By: Dylan PegginIn the heart of the Fishtown neighborhood of Philadelphia, just under the Market Street Elevated (‘the el’ as the locals call it), is a mural of text and visual interpretations of songs from a native’s album. That mural alone cements Kurt Vile's place within the city’s culture. Originally from the borough of Lansdowne, Kurt’s career progressed from creating low-fidelity bedroom recordings to the slickest-sounding nuggets from his home studio. Vile’s twist on... Read More
Comments: 0July 27th, 2025
Chess Gets a 75th Anniversary Reissue Series Too, Courtesy, Acoustic Sounds six titles mastered by Matthew Lutthans from the original analog master tapes By: Tracking Angle
Acoustic Sounds announced today a 75th anniversary Chess Records series, with 6 titles to be rolled out 2 monthly starting October 17th, all cut from original master tapes by Matthew Lutthans and pressed at Quality Record Pressing, housed in archival quality gatefold "Tip on" jackets.
Read More Comments: 9