Hot Stamper Pressings of the Music of Miles Davis Available Now
UPDATE 2024: As good as the best 70s Red Label pressings may be, it’s unlikely that any copy other than the Six-Eye original will win a shootout these days.
In other words, in 2013 we still had a lot to learn about Kind of Blue even after we had been doing shootouts for the album for the eight years starting in 2005.
Doing shootouts for the album about twice a year, over the next eleven years and roughly 22 shootouts with every Columbia label represented, the data are in, and the right originals win every time, with no exceptions to that rule in a very long time. As you may have read elsewhere on the blog:
We don’t know it all and we’ve never pretended we did. All knowledge is provisional. We may not be the smartest guys in the room, but we’re sure as hell smart enough to know that much.
We regularly learn from our mistakes and we hope you do too.
But we learn things from the records we play not by reading about them, but by playing them. Our experiments, conducted using the shootout process we’ve painstakingly developed and refined over the course of the last twenty years, produces all the data we need: the winners, the losers, and the ranking for all the records in-between.
We’ve learned to ignore everything but the sound of the records we’ve actually played on our reference system.
This approach allows us to have a unique, and, to our way of thinking, uniquely valuable service to offer the discriminating audiophile. When you’re tired of wasting your time and money on the ubiquitous mediocrities that populate the major audiophile dealers’ sites and take up far too much space in your local record store, let us show you just how much more real handpicked-for-quality recordings can do for your enjoyment of music.
Our Commentary from 2013
This is one of the very best copies we’ve ever heard, and we have literally played more than a HUNDRED copies of this album over just the last five years.
If you want to hear what a top pressing of Kind Of Blue can do on an audiophile system, this baby right here is your ticket to ride.
You get striking clarity, astonishing transparency, correct tonality, and startling immediacy on this KILLER side one! We dropped the needle on a ton of these this week, and we didn’t hear better sound for either side anywhere else. Scores of copies have been pressed over the years, but it’s not easy to find one that’s lively and dynamic yet still communicates the relaxed nature of this music.
When the band really starts cutting loose on So What, you’re going to lose your mind! The sound is open and spacious with a wonderful three-dimensional quality that gives each musician a defined space. You can easily tune in to one member and follow their contributions as the band stretches out.
We were armed with a big stack of copies, but nothing knocked us out like this side one did. It’s sweeter up top and more solid down low than anything else we played. The brass is lovely with lots of breath and the right amount of bite. The overall sound is lively and dynamic with the kind of presence that helps carries the music out of the speakers and throughout your listening to room. Wall to wall, floor to ceiling Kind Of Blue sound? You better believe it!
Side two is nearly as amazing. It’s big and present with amazing sound to the brass. You will not believe the energy, clarity and immediacy on this side. My notes read “WOW!” and I bet you’ll feel the same way. In fact, I guarantee it!
Hard To Beat? Impossible!
In my opinion, the best sound for this album is found on standard domestic Red Label pressings from the ’70s. I’m fully aware of how outrageous a statement that may sound. But I’ve long known of amazing sounding Kind Of Blue reissues.
Having played scores of different pressings of this record over the years, I think I know this recording about as well as anyone. The tube mastered original Six Eye Stereo copies have wonderful, lush, sweet sound. I’ve heard many of them. The 360s from the ’60s often split the difference — less tubey magical, but cleaner and more correct. The Red Labels are all over the map, ranging from smeary and dull to out of this world. And this copy, my friends, is one of the good ones.
My point here is simply this: you can cut this record DIFFERENTLY, but I don’t think you can’t cut it any BETTER.
So what do you get on this copy? Zero distortion. Zero compression. 100% transparency. Amazing transients. The sense that you are hearing every instrument sound exactly the way it really does sound. No earlier pressing had the kind of high-resolution sound that more modern cutting equipment allows for. The clarity is simply stunning.
What About The Earlier Pressings?
If you cut it with tubes it will bring out some qualities not as evident on this pressing. But there will be drawbacks as well. It’s a matter of trade-offs. There is no copy that will satisfy everyone, just as there is no speaker or amplifier that will satisfy everyone.
Now don’t get me wrong. I love tubey colorations. I say so all over this site. But there is no way that the qualities of this record exist on those early, tubey cuttings. They simply didn’t have the technology. The technology they did have is wonderful in its own way. And this record is wonderful in its own, very different, way.
Unimpeachable [!] Audiophile Credentials
We know we’re asking a lot of money for a record that any jazz record dealer would be embarrassed to charge more than $25 for. (Actually, these are starting to sell for $40+ pretty regularly on eBay and elsewhere. Apparently the word got out that these can sound incredible. Blame us!) But jazz record dealers don’t know anything about sound. They know about collectibility. They know about price guides. They know their market — jazz collectors — and I know mine: audiophiles. This record has unimpeachable audiophile credentials. It has the sound in the grooves like you have never heard before. And who else but your friends at Better Records are going to be able to tell you that?
Further Reading