
Hot Stamper Pressings of the Music of Pink Floyd Available Now
One of our good customers had this to say about a Hot Stamper pressing he purchased recently:
Hi Tom,
Last night I had a ticket to a very special show.
It was my first ever listen to a 3+ Side 1 of Dark Side of the Moon.
It was so good that I got transported somewhere and back and didn’t even realize it. I had the gain turned all the way up. Perhaps it would have been better for the vocals on the first track to turn the gain down a little, but not for the music.
I have heard a 2.5+ before on my other copy which has a 3+ side 2, but the 3+ completely takes the cake.
What a pleasure it was to listen to. The vinyl was pretty darn quiet too.
I mean… over the years… Japanese, Japanese Pro Use, MFSL, UHQR, UK, UK A2/B2, UK A3/B3, US 30th Anniversary…
And you mean to tell me it all comes down to a variant of a [redacted] with several deadwax configurations. Only the super lucky might have ever figured it out. I didn’t have a chance in hell!
Take good care,
Michel
Michel,
Think of all the money you spent chasing one copy after another of Dark Side of the Moon, only to be disappointed time and time again.
Somehow none of those pressings, the ones that have been idolized by in-the-know audiophiles for more than fifty years — promoted again and again as the only possible solution to your problem, the true answer you seek — could take you to the places that our humble mass-produced import reissue took you to.
This is absurd. It flies in the face of everything we know! Do you really expect other enthusiasts to believe your story that all the most highly-regarded audiophile versions couldn’t get the job done?
These are the pressings that everyone knows are the best. And somehow you have the balls to say otherwise! You ought to be run out of town on a rail. You probably made the whole thing up.
If your were to post any of this on an audiophile forum, they would be well within their rights to call you every name in the book and revoke your posting privileges to boot.
You wouldn’t be the first apostate shown the door. You obviously don’t know what you are talking about. Your ignorant nonsense is no longer welcome here!
As a persona non grata myself, I say welcome to my world.
Enough of that, let’s get back to the subject at hand, Dark Side of the Moon. We wrote commentaries about a number of these well-regarded titles when we discussed this ridiculous video shootout.
(Any shootout for Dark Side that has Canadian and domestic pressings has to be seen as ridiculous. Only a lo-fi or mid-fi system could possibly hide their shortcomings and limitations. Note that the host of the video does not show you his system or room. That is a dead giveaway that he is likely incapable of playback that a record as huge and powerful as Dark Side needs in order to sound its best.)
Here is our commentary from years back:
Most of the versions of DSOTM that this individual is reviewing have never impressed us sonically. They are the pressings that most audiophiles have probably heard about and read about in the magazines and on forums. If you know practically nothing about the album going in, these might be some of the six pressings you would consider playing against each other in a shootout. To be charitable, I suppose you could call it a good start.
Our reviewer seems to be the type who puts a great deal of faith in so-called audiophile pressings — the Japanese Pro-Use Series, the UHQR — the kinds of records that sound more and more artificial and/or mediocre to us with each passing year.
If your stereo is not showing you what’s wrong with these records, you have your work cut out for you. This is especially true of some of the Ultra High Quality Records put out by Mobile Fidelity in the early 80s, like this one.
The domestic pressings we have auditioned over the years have never made it into a real shootout. They have always sounded far too flat and veiled to be taken seriously.
The Doug Sax-mastered Heavy Vinyl from 2003 we played years ago was way too bright and phony to our ears. We hated it and said so at the time.
We came across a very early British pressing about fifteen twenty years ago, the one with the solid blue triangle label, but it was not as good as other pressings we were playing at the time and we never bought another one.
We’ve liked a lot of later UK pressings over the years, but we don’t go out of our way to buy those now that we have heard the really amazing pressings we like now.
As I said, we discovered the killer stampers about five ten years ago, and that showed us an out of this world Dark Side we had no idea even existed.
Speaking of not having a chance in hell of finding the killer pressings, you hit the nail right on the head.
I probably bought my first killer Dark Side in 1980 — the original MoFi pressing, 1-017 in the series. I was already a big fan of their first rock release, 1-005, Crime of the Century, and I proceeded to buy every title they put out as long as it had music I wanted to hear. I kept buying their records right up until about 1985 when they switched over to CDs. (I bought a lot of their CDs too and still play them. Many of them are superb.)
As far as the Dark Side on MoFi is concerned, I remember disliking the murky vocals on Breathe even back then, long before I knew that Stan Ricker’s standard operating procedure was to suck out the midrange on every record he mastered. Some are better than others, but none of them will ever sound right the way a vintage real-time mastered record can sound.
So, from 1980 until about 2015, that’s how long it took us to figure out which are the best pressings of Dark Side of the Moon — from which country, from which era, with which stampers.
Roughly 35 years. What chance would any single person have to succeed in finding a pressing with the highest quality sound on Dark Side? A vanishingly small chance. Practically no chance.
Calm, Cool and Collected
We approach a nearly unsolvable problem like this with a healthy dose of sanguinity. We’re not in any hurry. We have more than enough records to keep us busy.
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