Hot Stamper Pressing of Miles’s Albums Available Now
One of our good customers had this to say about some Hot Stampers he purchased recently:
Hey Tom,
Listening to Kind Of Blue. Who needs an equipment upgrade with records like these?
Our reply at the time:
So true!
But on further reflection, it became clear to me that there is more to this idea than one might think upon first hearing it.
When records sound as good as Kind of Blue on vintage vinyl (not this piece of trash), it’s easy to think that everything in the system must be working properly, and, more to the point, reproducing the sound of the album at a high level.
If only more records were as well recorded as KOB, we could save ourselves a lot of time and money, time and money that we’re currently spending on tweaking, tuning and upgrading the various components of our systems. (Assuming you are in fact doing these things. I certainly hope you are. Achieving higher quality sound is one of the greatest joys to be had in all of audio.)
This is undoubtedly true, as far as it goes. But we must live in the world of records as we find it, not the one we want to exist.
Finding good sound for most of the records you wish to enjoy takes a great deal of effort, assuming you are setting your standards for sound at an exceptionally high level. Yours don’t have to be as high as ours — we’re the guys who put their reputations on the line for extravagantly priced Hot Stampers, not you — but the records you are playing have to sound good enough to allow you to forget they are records and just get lost in the music.
With every improvement you make to your system, you eventually will find yourself banging your head up against the psychological effect of Hedonic Adaptation.* Once you have achieved better sound, it doesn’t take long before you get used to it, and now your much-improved “new normal” isn’t as thrilling as it was when you first experienced it.







Hot Stamper Pressings of Miles’s Albums Available Now
