This Super Hot Stamper original Large Tulips DG pressing (with stereo in red on the cover) has the kind of Tubey Magical Midrange that modern records cannot even BEGIN to reproduce. Folks, that sound is gone and it sure isn’t showing signs of coming back. If you love hearing INTO a recording, actually being able to “see” the performers, and feeling like you are sitting in a real concert hall, this is the record for you. It’s what Golden Age Classical Recordings are known for — THIS SOUND. (more…)
_Composers – Schubert
The Trout Quintet – Original Versus Reissue
More of the music of Franz Schubert
This unusual 2-pack combines two very different pressings from very different eras to create a complete performance of The “Trout” Quintet with SUPERB Super Hot Stamper (or better) on both sides. One pressing, the one shown, is from the early ’60s; the other is from 1982. How could an imported budget late reissue beat a superb Golden Age pressing on any side you ask? Well, the answer to that question is provided by the records we will send you.
Side one of this London Whiteback pressing is dark and opaque, with a serious lack of both top end and clarity. Side two however is GORGEOUS: so big, rich, clear and lively, it earned a sonic grade of A++ to A+++! In our shootouts the person reviewing the records (in this case me) never knows which pressing is being critiqued. Imagine my surprise when the late London handily beat the early one.
Actually it’s easy to imagine my surprise, because there was simply no surprise to imagine. In our shootouts here at Better Records, later pressings beat early pressings regularly. We let the records speak for themselves, and that’s what they told us, at least on side one of The “Trout.” The reason the late pressing even made it into our shootout was that in a preliminary round it showed us that it had very good sound on side one. Side two didn’t hold up, but any record with good sound on any side is going to go in the shootout, regardless of the “incorrectness” of its label or country of origin.
On the earlier pressing (CS 6090) the sound is rich and sweet; some might say it’s too rich, but for this music it works. The piano and the strings have that Golden Age Tubey Magical sound we love. It’s been years since I’ve had the opportunity to play this record; most copies are just too beat up to bother with, so I was glad to find this one in such minty condition. (more…)
Every Label Made Mediocre Records – London Released This One in 1963
More of the music of Franz Schubert (1797-1828)
More of the music of Antonin Dvorak (1841-1904)
The copy we auditioned was opaque and veiled, much like the Heavy Vinyl reissues that are flooding the market these days. Definitely not our sound.
Looking for pressings with audiophile quality sound and mostly quiet surfaces?
Here Are the Decca/London recordings that are currently available on our site.
As far as we can tell, based on this single copy, CS 6357 is not an album worthy of a Hot Stamper shootout.
We certainly can’t say that there aren’t good sounding pressings of the album though. If we hear a better one down the road, we would certainly be open to the possibility of doing a shootout and offering the best copies to our customers.
Perhaps you have one you like. If so, please let us know. You can email me at tom@better-records.com
Schubert / Symphony No. 9 (“The Great”) / Skrowaczewski
More of the music of Franz Schubert (1797-1828)

- A Superb Super Hot side two – rich strings on a Merc? Yes!
- Nearly as good on side one – spacious and open, with a huge stage
- Reasonably quiet vinyl for a vintage Mercury
- One of the great symphonic works of the Romantic period
This Colorback Maroon Label RFR pressing (SR 90272) has wonderful orchestral sound, with both sides having Hot Stampers. Side two earned the full Two Pluses for its relatively rich strings, a quality one rarely hears on Mercury recordings from this era. The string texture is superb here, so critical to the enjoyment of a large scale romantic symphony such as this.
Various / The Heifetz-Piatigorsky Concerts
Hot Stamper Pressings Featuring the Violin
Superb Recordings with Jascha Heifetz Performing

This is one of the pressings we’ve discovered with reversed polarity.
This IMMACULATE set has dry, edgy, screechy sound — until you reverse your absolute phase! Then it sounds pretty good! It certainly will never win any awards, but it’s practically unlistenable without the phase reversed.
Now I can’t say that’s true for all six sides. I play graded all six sides — they range from M- to slightly worse, about as quiet as these Soria pressings ever are — but I only reversed the phase on side one after dropping the needle on the other sides and suffering through the brittle sound. (more…)
Mendelssohn & Schubert / Symphony No. 4 & Symphony No. 5
Hot Stamper Pressings of the Music of Felix Mendelssohn Available Now
The strings are rich, with lovely rosiny texture and virtually no tube smear. Played with zest and the recording is every bit as lively.
The grade on side one could even be better than Two Pluses — we just don’t have enough clean copies to know. Big bass at the end, powerful dynamics too.
Side two was good but nothing like this amazing side one. Too much smear hurts it badly, and the mark is not helping either.
We’re pricing this one for just the one side. Fortunately it’s the complete symphony, one of Mendelssohn’s most famous works.




