This Craft Pressing Was Definitely Born Under a Bad Sign

Hot Stamper Pressings of Electric Blues Albums Available Now

About a year ago we played the Craft pressing (CR00513) that had come out in 2023.

We have audition notes for lots of these dreadful Heavy Vinyl pressings sitting around. Sometimes they sit around for years. Obviously we are in no hurry to put them up.

The notes I took for the Craft pressing of Lush Life that Geoff Edgers played me still has not been posted, and he played me that record all the way back in 2022. For those of you who can’t wait for the complete review, I told him it sounded like a CD and proceeded to take it off the turntable.

At the time, I don’t think he understood how that could even be possible. He’d visited Bernie Grundman and read all the rave reviews for his work in the audiophile press. What do you mean his record sounds like a CD? Who the hell do you think you are anyway?

Geoff knows what that means now. I will leave it at that.

We were not surprised to find that the sound of this Craft pressing was terrible. Whoever this Jeff Powell is, I admit I’ve never heard of him, if you see his name on a remastered record, you might want to consider that if he can make a record that sounds this bad, he may not know what he is doing.

This strikes us as a safe bet.

Our notes for the album comprise all of five words. They read:

  • Not good
  • Blurry and congested

As you can see, we didn’t feel the need to spend too much time with it. When a record shows you right off the bat how badly mastered it is, we move on pretty quickly.

We admitted to having liked the Sundazed pressing when it came out in the late-90s, something that you can imagine embarrasses us no end now. In our defense, let me just say 1998 was a long time ago, before we had ever heard a properly cleaned, really good sounding original pressing.

We know how good the originals can sound. We’ve played them. What we have not been able to do is to find enough quiet, good sounding copies to do a shootout. Even at more than a hundred bucks a pop, it’s the rare copy that does not go back to the seller for excessive noise and groove damage. This record was not bought by audiophiles to play on expensive equipment.  The opposite of that demographic cohort would be closer to the truth.

As for the record collecting public, one guy on Discogs thought it didn’t sound good, but for some reason he gave it three stars anyway. Our review would have been one star out of five, assuming that even the worst sounding record must get at least one star. The other three who reviewed the album seemed to really like it.

Allow me to add some other reviews I have just now screen-captured (saving me a lot of typing!).

I have chosen a few excerpts of the review by Evan Toth for The Tracking Angle in order to give you a better picture of why he awarded the record a sound grade of 8:

The American Songwriter website gave the record 4 out of 5 stars for sound.

Mike O’Cull, writing for The Rock and Blues Muse website, had this to say:

I really can’t add much to what has been said about the new Craft pressing by these reviewers, other than to note that anyone believing a word of any of it needs to sit down in a quiet room and reflect on how little the modern audiophile or music reviewer seems to knows about sound quality.

This piece of crap record gets raves on discogs, an 8 out of 11 on The Tracking Angle, 4 out of five stars, and is called “an absolutely amazing reissue” for reasons that make no sense whatsoever to either me or my audition staff.

I get that folks want to support vinyl, but why do they want to support vinyl of such poor quality?

Heavy Vinyl and Its Discontents

Even as recently as the early 2000s, we were still impressed with many of the better Heavy Vinyl pressings. If we’d never made the progress we’ve worked so hard to make over the course of the last twenty or more years, perhaps we would find more merit in the Heavy Vinyl reissues so many audiophiles seem impressed by.

We’ll never know of course; that’s a bell that can be unrung. We did the work, we can’t undo it, and the system that resulted from it is merciless in revealing the truth — that these newer pressings are second-rate at best and much more often than not third-rate and even worse.

Setting higher standards — no, being able to set higher standards — in our minds is a clear mark of progress. Judging by the hundreds of letters we’ve received, especially the ones comparing our records to their Heavy Vinyl and Half-Speed mastered counterparts, we know that our customers see things the same way.


Further Reading

2 comments

    1. Another bad sounding Craft Recordings release.

      How do these companies make one bad sounding record after another and stay in business?

      I’m sure you are as confused as I am by how many record buyers are falling for these crappy reissues. One guy in the Discogs comments complains, but all the other posters are happy as clams with the sound, although not with the bad vinyl and pressing defects.

Leave a Reply to humoremCancel reply