
Hot Stamper Pressings of Top Quality Jazz Albums Available Now
In the early 2000’s we auditioned an amazing sounding cheap reissue pressing of this album. By 2008 we finally had enough copies to do a shootout.
The fact that we were not able to find a copy with two killer sides tells me a few different things about what may or may not have been true at the time. (2008 was early days in the world of Hot Stamper shootouts.)
One, that we may not have had a big enough pile of copies to play. This is before Discogs made it easy to find a record like this, so chancing upon copies locally was very much a hit or miss deal, or
Two, we couldn’t clean them as well as we can now, or
Three, we couldn’t play them as well as we can now, or
Four, some or all of the above, to one degree or another. (This is of course how audio works, which, for those of us who have been in it for a long time, is best described as mysteriously.)
Our 2008 Review
The 1955 mono sound by Tom Dowd on this White Hot 2-pack is DEMO DISC quality. The horns are breathy and clear, yet as full and as rich as can be. There may be a good reason that this pressing sounds as good as it does: it was remastered by one of the greatest mastering engineers of all time, George Piros.
Tom Dowd is the original recording engineer, and this one album should be all the proof you need that when it comes to jazz in mono, the guy is hard to beat. Rock in stereo, there his record is quite a bit more spotty (see, or better yet, listen to Cream, The Young Rascals, Delaney and Bonnie and too many others to list).
Side One – Record One
A+++, good energy, clear saxes and cymbals, a big bottom end — everything is here and everything sounds right. This is some of the best mono jazz sound we have heard in a very long time.
The “bad” side here is thin and not that tubey, which is clearly the wrong sound for this music.
Side Two – Record Two
A+++, lively, never hard nor shrill, tubey and rich, big — hard to fault!
The “bad” side here is terrible: dark, small and recessed. Play it and see how dramatic the difference is.
One More Thing
We recently posted a lengthy commentary about conventional wisdom to make the case that, although the most common record collecting approaches are more often right than wrong, there is simply no way to know when any specific approach will work for any specific title.
If you want better sounding records, opening your mind to the idea that some reissues have the potential to sound better than even the best original pressings will help you find them.
These reissues, for starters, and there are hundreds more on the blog you can read about here.
Two important points to keep in mind:
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