Hot Stamper Pressings of the Music of Cat Stevens Available Now
This commentary was written circa 2001.
I remember 15 years ago when Acoustic Sounds was selling the then in-print 25th Anniversary Island pressing (with 7U stampers as I recall) for $15, claiming that it was a TAS List record. If you’ve ever heard the pressing, you know it has no business going anywhere near a Super Disc List. It’s mediocre at best and has virtually none of the magic of the good originals.
NEWSFLASH: Just looked it up on Discogs, a site that did not exist when I wrote this commentary. My memory is apparently better than I thought it was. The 25th Anniversary Island Life Collection pressing came out in 1986.
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- Matrix / Runout (Runout side A, variant 1): ILPM 9154 A-1 ILPM•9154•A1
- Matrix / Runout (Runout side B, variant 1): ILPM 9154 B-7U-1-1-3
- Matrix / Runout (Runout side A, variant 2): ILPM 9154 A-8U-1- G10
- Matrix / Runout (Runout side B, variant 2): ILPM 9154 B-7U-1-
By the way, I am not aware of any of these pressings from the 80s being especially good sounding. I remember playing some of them but I don’t remember liking any of them. They were cheap reissues that satisfied those looking for import vinyl, not audiophile quality sound.
I refused to sell it back in those days, for no other reason than the fact that it’s far from a Better Sounding Record. I don’t like misrepresenting records and I don’t like ripping off my customers. It’s bad for business.
That pressing was a fraud and I was having none of it.
Chad probably didn’t even know the difference.
When you don’t know much about records, you can say all sorts of things and not get called out for them. Audiophiles are a credulous bunch and always have been. They still believe the same nonsense that I foolishly fell for back in the 80s. (And I admit that even as late as 2006 I was still a fan of certain Heavy Vinyl pressings.)
Over the last twenty years we’ve figured a few things out. Most of what we learned you can read about in one or more of the 5000 entries on this blog.
We’re still waiting for most of the audiophile community to catch up with us. The desire to believe makes it hard for audiophiles to approach audio problems scientifically. They accept things that are easily disproven, but when you want to believe as badly as most audiophiles do, why make the effort to find out whether what you believe is true or not?
Here are two commentaries along those same lines that we think make for good reading:
- It sure is hard to hear what you don’t want to hear
- When your theory is this good, why bother to test it?
Further Reading
- More records that do not belong on a Super Disc list
- Reviews and commentaries for TAS Super Disc recordings

