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Simply Red – Picture Book

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Finally, Analog Sound for this wonderful music. The average copy of this album may sound like you’re playing a CD, but not this one. Here is the warmth and richness and depth you didn’t know you could find on Simply Red’s Masterpiece (assuming you were even looking). That flat, opaque, dry CD sound that we all love to hate is nowhere to be found on this pressing.

The domestic pressings can be good, but they sure don’t sound like this killer import.

A recording from 1985 is unlikely to have the Tubey Magic and warmth of an old Columbia. Let’s be serious, the 1980s –- unlike the three decades that preceded them — were not known for the naturalness of their recordings. A few would make our Top 100 list (Let’s Dance springs to mind) but the pool of available candidates is shallow, not wide and deep like that of the decades before, in which so many records sound so good we could not begin to squeeze them into a list limited to merely one hundred. Two hundred would easily make the cut, maybe more.

For the 80s, it would be hard to come up with even a dozen I should think. Which is neither here nor there. The record must stand or fall on its own merits, not those of other records from the same decade, and fortunately this one stands very tall.

The Best Sound

The recording has real dynamics. I actually used to demonstrate my stereo with “Sad Old Red.” At one point the sound really explodes, which has always had a strong appeal for me; that’s what live music does and that’s what I want my stereo to do.

For thirty years I’ve avoided little boxes and screens and gone straight for the big dynamic speaker systems that can really show you the life that’s hiding in your recordings. That’s what the revolutionary changes in audio commentary is all about — unlocking all the energy and excitement that a good LP has to offer.

“Holding Back the Years” also boasts superb sound. It may be the best track the band ever recorded, and it’s probably the one most everyone knows, but there are many here that are nearly as good. The cover of The Talking Heads’ “Heaven” (from Fear of Music) is out of this world.

By the way, if you love this band, check out A New Flame. It’s the only other consistently good album in their canon.

What The Best Sides Of Picture Book Have To Offer Is Not Hard To Hear

No doubt there’s more but we hope that should do for now. Playing the record is the only way to hear all of the qualities we discuss above, and playing the best pressings against a pile of other copies under rigorously controlled conditions is the only way to find a pressing that sounds as good as this one does.

What We’re Listening For On Picture Book

A Must Own Pop and Soul Record

We consider this Simply Red album a Pop Masterpiece and a Soul Masterpiece

It is a recording that should be part of any serious Collection of Popular Music and Soul Music. Others that belong in that category can be found here and here.

Side One

Come to My Aid
Sad Old Red
Look at You Now
Heaven
Jericho

Side Two

Money’s Too Tight (To Mention)
Holding Back the Years
Red Box
No Direction
Picture Book

AMG 4 1/2 Star Review

The band finds a steady R&B groove reminiscent of ’60s Stax house band the MG’s, and, as with the MG’s, it’s all in the service of a big-voiced soul singer, in this case a British redhead. Features the U.S. number-one “Holding Back the Years” and the U.K. Top 20 “Money’s Too Tight (To Mention).”

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