Hot Stamper Pressings of the Music of Stravinsky Available Now
Dorati’s performance of The Firebird for Mercury is excellent for adjusting tracking weight, VTA, azimuth and the like.
A huge and powerful recording such as The Firebird quickly separates the men from the boys when it comes to the honest recreation of an orchestra performing live in a concert hall.
Recordings of this quality are the reason $10,000+ front ends exist in the first place. Just ask Robert Brook.
You don’t need to spend that kind of money to play this record, but if you do, this might just be the record that will show you what you got for all your hard-earned dough.
Ideally you would want to work your setup magic at home with this record, then take it to a friend’s house and see if the same results could be achieved on his system.
I actually did this sort of thing for years.
Sadly, not so much anymore; nobody I know can play records such as these the way we can.
Playing and critically evaluating records all day, every day, year after year, you get pretty good at it. And the more you do it, the easier it gets.
UPDATE 2025
The above was written about ten years ago. By then I had learned enough to know that all the systems my audio friends owned were woefully inadequate to the proper reproducton of sonic blockbusters such as The Firebird. They simply hadn’t spent the money on their equipment or done the tweaking and tuning work that it takes to play a magnificent recording such as this.
It was about this time that I stopped visiting them. In my experience, mediocre sound is not simply a matter of being less enjoyable than good sound. In fact, I found it to be the opposite of enjoyable. It was frustrating, irritating and unpleasant, and I wanted no part of it. My friends couldn’t hear what was wrong — they had nothing better to compare the sound to. I knew how much better it could sound because I had the killer pressings and the highly-tweaked system that were able to work magic on orchestral spectaculars like The Firebird. (More on that subject here.)
By the way, Robert Brook can get your front end tuned up and working right.
We highly recommend his new service. It might just put you on the path to achieving the next level in audio. (You will definitely struggle to get there with a table, arm and cartridge that aren’t set up with a high degree of precision by a person who knows what they are doing, and Robert has been doing this work for years now.)
Properly set VTA is especially critical on this record, as it is on most classical recordings. The smallest change will dramatically affect the timbre, texture and harmonic information of the strings, as well as all the other instruments of the symphony orchestra of course.
A recent listing was described this way:
- One listen to either side and you’ll know this is one of the top Mercury titles of all time. Dorati breathes life into the work as only he can.
- Both sides are clear, alive, and transparent, with huge hall space extending from wall to wall and floor to ceiling.
- The illusion of zero compression.
- This pressing boasts rich, sweet strings, especially for a Mercury.
- Both sides really get quiet in places, a sure sign that all the dynamics of the master tape were protected in the mastering of this copy.
- The Heavy Vinyl reissues – at 45 or 33, on one disc or four – barely begin to capture the energy and drive Dorati brings to the work.
Further Reading
- Turntable setup advice
- More of our favorite orchestral test discs
- When you’re just getting started in audio, it all looks so easy

