Month: December 2024

Chad and Bernie Step on Another Rake

Hot Stamper Pressings of the Music of Art Pepper Available Now

Just in time for Record Store Day — what could be better?

In the interest of streamlining the process of getting reviews like this up on the blog, we’ll try to stick mostly to the facts and let the description of the strengths and weaknesses of the pressings speak for themselves.

One quick note: the sonic qualities you see described below are the ones we heard with the mono switch on our EAR 324P phono stage activated.

Without the switch set to mono, the sound is even thicker and darker.

Yes, as bad as this pressing sounds, you can make it worse if you don’t switch your preamp or phono stage to mono. Hard to believe but it’s true!

The notes for side one can be seen below. For side one we started with the second track.

Side One

Track Two / Red Pepper Blues

  • Boomy low end
  • Sax is stuck [in the speakers]
  • And lacking in breath and space

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Khachaturian – Violin Concerto / Kogan

More Classical Recordings Featuring the Violin

  • A vintage Maroon Label Victrola stereo pressing of Khachaturian’s Violin Concerto (only the second copy to ever hit the site), here with solid Double Plus (A++) grades or close to them from first note to last
  • It’s also fairly quiet at Mint Minus Minus, a grade that even our most well-cared-for vintage classical titles have trouble playing at
  • This copy of VICS 1153 showed us the balance of clarity and sweetness we were looking for in the violin (particularly on side two) – not many recordings from this era can do that
  • Side two is simply bigger, more transparent, less distorted, more three-dimensional and more real than most of what we played, and side one is not far behind in all those areas

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Pictures at an Exhibition – Uncannily Natural Piano Reproduction

More of the music of Modest Mussorgsky (1839-1881)

In a recent listing for a shootout winning pressing, we noted:

This original London pressing of the solo piano version of Pictures at an Exhibition has uncannily natural piano reproduction, which is why we are awarding this side one our highest sonic grade, A Triple Plus.

The fact that the recording takes place in Kingsway Hall in 1967 no doubt plays a large part in the natural sound. The hall is bigger here than on other copies, the piano even more solidly weighted, yet none of this comes at the expense of the clarity of the playing.

The piano has no smear, allowing both the percussive aspects of the instrument and the extended harmonics of the notes to be heard clearly and appreciated fully.

Side two has Mehta’s performance of the orchestrated work squeezed onto side two, which is never a good idea if one is looking for high quality orchestral sound. The performance itself is mediocre as well.

We are not, and never haver been, big fans of Mehta’s work with the Los Angeles Philharmonic on London.

The exceptionally rare copy of Mehta’s Planets can sound good, but 90% of them do not — just don’t make the mistake of telling that to the average audiophile who owns one. Harry told him it was the best, he paid good money for it, and until someone tells him different it had better be “the one Planets to own.” (Our favorite performance of The Planets can be found here.)

We see one of our roles here at Better Records as being the guys who actually will “tell you different,” and, more importantly, can back up our opinions with the records that make our case for us. (more…)

Letter of the Week – “Your Hot Stampers have changed the game for me.”

Hot Stamper Pressings of the Music of Foreigner Available Now

One of our good customers had this to say about some Hot Stampers he purchased recently:  

Hi Tom,

Recently I purchased Double Vision by Foreigner White Hot stamper 3/3. I also have the MoFi #1-052 copy. Using your notes, I did a comparison of the two copies.

Double Vision WH stamper 3/3, absolutely mind bending on my system and every bit as described in the notes. WOW!

On the other hand, the MoFi copy is just like the rest of the early MoFi copies I have. They are nothing special!

The low end sounded like the sound was underwater! The midrange is smeared, harsh and very hard to listen to, especially at loud volumes. The high end (cymbals) were there but nothing special. The voice sounded like it was on a 2 dimensional plain. No depth or space around it. No extension from top to bottom, no space or air between the instruments. No 3-D to the voice.

If I had never listened to a Hot Stamper in my life, especially WH or NWH copies, I probably would have thought the sound was great.

However, your Hot Stampers (WH & NWH) have changed the game for me. I do have a system that will blow your mind and probably your socks off too.

The sound is absolutely awesome and mind bending and what an incredible spiritual experience!

Thx, Mike

Mike followed up the next day with this additional thought:

One thing I want to add to my comments. One of the most important aspects of the Hot Stamper vs MoFi….

Absolutely NO energy from the MoFi copy and TONS of energy from the WH stamper!

Yeah baby!

Dear Mike,

It’s amazing how many audiophiles do not seem to notice that Half-Speed mastered records almost always are seriously lacking in energy and musical drive, especially the rock titles.

What good is a compressed, lifeless Foreigner record? Their music lives and dies by how lively it is. The MoFi we played years ago was dead on arrival. Seems yours is too.

And if you start pulling out all the MoFi pressings in your collection, you are going to find that the other titles you own have a lot in common with your Foreigner MoFi — they’re guaranteed to bore you to tears.

Clear out that crap and put the money towards records that have real life in their grooves. Those are the ones we sell, but you can find your own using our shootout approach and the advice we give out here on the blog.

Thanks for writing.

Best, TP

Mike read this post and added the following the next day:

Read your blog, thank you for your feedback.

Recently I mentioned to Fred regarding the fact that I will no longer buy a vinyl pressing from anyone but you guys. He mentioned it is a common refrain from many of your best customers.

It is like a man being blind his whole life and suddenly being given sight! That is how powerful the experience is with Hot Stampers versus the boring…

Soon, I will start listing albums from my collection I purchased over the last 5 years uninformed by the machine (record companies) just how funny and crappy their records sound!

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Patti Smith Group – Easter

More New Wave

More Women Who Rock

  • Here is an outstanding copy of Easter (one of only a handful to hit the site in three years) with solid Double Plus (A++) grades or BETTER from top to bottom
  • Side two was sonically very close to our Shootout Winner – you will be shocked at how big and powerful the sound is
  • Forget whatever dead-as-a-doornail Heavy Vinyl record they’re making these days – if you want to hear the Tubey Magic, size and energy of Smith’s breakthrough from 1978, this is the way to go
  • 4 1/2 stars: “Easter, produced by Bruce Springsteen associate Jimmy Iovine, was Smith’s most commercial-sounding effort yet and, due to the inclusion of Springsteen’s ‘Because the Night’ (with Smith’s revised lyrics), a Top Ten hit, it became her biggest seller, staying in the charts more than five months and getting into the Top 20 LPs. But Smith hadn’t so much sold out as she had learned to use her poetic gifts within an album rock context.”

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Rush / 2112

More Rush

More Prog Rock

  • A seriously good copy of the band’s 1976 release with solid Double Plus (A++) grades or close to them on both sides – fairly quiet vinyl too
  • We’ve collected a bunch of these over the years – it took ages to find a few outstanding pressings that delivered the kind of sound we were looking for, and here is an awfully good one
  • Most Rush records sound godawful, but this one actually has the potential to be amazing – as long as you’ve got the right copy
  • 4 1/2 stars: “[2112] proved to be their much sought-after commercial breakthrough and remains one of their most popular albums.”

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Imagine on MoFi Heavy Vinyl from 2003

Hot Stamper Pressings of the Music of John Lennon Available Now

Sonic Grade: B

The last time I played this record was probably in the mid-2000s. Not sure what I would think of it now. Probably not much. Back in those days we thought it was a reasonably good sounding pressing, but it’s doubtful we had ever heard an exceptionally good version of the album, as it would be years before we managed to do our first shootout for it. To see what we have to say about the record now, please click here.

Our review from many years ago:

I played this when it came out, and I have to hand it to the new MOFI, they did a great job with this one. It sounds better than I’ve ever heard it, and KILLS the old MoFi vinyl, which is the version we did the shootout with.

It was a short comparison, as in, no comparison. The earlier MoFi Half Speed (a different master tape, but still…) has that classic MoFi midrange suckout this awful label is famous for, so that Lennon and his piano on the first track sound like they are coming from another room. 

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Brahms & Dvorak / Hungarian & Slavonic Dances – Updated

Hot Stamper Classical and Orchestral Imports on Decca & London

UPDATE 2022

The last time we played a few copies of this London title, CS 6198, we were quite a bit less impressed than the review below might lead you to believe.

We found the sound to be plenty Tubey Magical, but the louder peaks were sour. Overall we judged the sound to be OK at best.

Having played a number of different pressings over the years, our favorite recording of the Slavonic Dances these days is the one with Kertesz on the Decca World of Great Classics budget reissue label.

It may come as a shock to some record collecting audiophiles, but there are actually budget reissues of some titles that can beat any and all comers. Here are some that we’ve come across, discoveries which we are happy to share with you.

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Chris Kimsey Engineered Two of My All Time My Favorite Records

Hot Stamper Pressings of Chris Kimsey Engineered Albums Available Now

I have two personal favorites among his many excellent recordings.

Both are Must Own records in my book. Masterpieces even.

Ten Years After – A Space in Time and Peter Frampton – Wind of Change.

If you have not heard one or both of these classics, check them out. They are the very definition of the kind of Big Production Rock I have been listening to since I first fell in love with them back in the early Seventies. That was about fifty years ago and I still play them regularly for enjoyment. I have never tired of either of them in all that time and I doubt I ever will.

I’m sure you have plenty of records you feel the same way about in your collection. These are two of mine.

They are the very definition of big speaker albums. The better pressings have the kind of energy in their grooves that is sure to leave most audiophile systems begging for mercy.

This is the Audio Challenge that awaits you. If you don’t have a system designed to play records with this kind of sonic firepower, don’t expect to hear them the way Chris Kimsey wanted you to.

Both albums want to rock your world, and that’s exactly what our Hot Stamper pressings are especially good at doing.

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Powerful People on MoFi – What Was I Thinking?

More Entries in the Mobile Fidelity Hall of Shame

UPDATE 2024:

I just found my old review notes from 2014! They can be seen below. Please to enjoy.

At the time of our last shootout in 2014, I still had the MoFi pressing of Powerful People in my personal, very small (at that point) record collection.

Almost all the best sounding records from my collection had been sold off long before, going to good homes that I can only assume would play them more than I had in the last ten years.

If it’s a record you see on our site, chances are good I’d have listened to it until I’d practically turned blue in the face.

But I had kept my Powerful People Half-Speed these 30+ years because the domestic pressings I’d played were just too damn midrangy to enjoy.

At least the MoFi had bass, top end and didn’t sound squawky or hard on the vocals.

Well, let me tell you, played against the best domestic pressings, the MoFi is laughable. (In that respect it shares much with the current crop of audiophile reissues.)

It’s unbelievably compressed, a problem that is easily heard on the biggest, most exciting parts of the tracks. They never get remotely as big or as loud on the MoFi as they do on the lowly A&M originals.

It’s also sucked out in the midrange, like most MoFis, and, like most MoFis and Half-Speeds in general, the bass is not well-defined, punchy, and it never goes very deep.

There is also the issue of the MoFi 10k boost on the top end — it’s clearly audible and as bothersome as ever.

In summation, like most of the better audiophile records — from long ago as well as those being produced today — the most you can hope for from these reissues is that they can fix a few problems you might be saddled with on the particular pressing you own.

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