Hot Stamper Pressings of Abbey Road Available Now
One our good customers wrote to tell us about his experience playing one of our Hot Stamper pressings of Abbey Road.
Hi Tom,
Tonight’s been really cool.
I got to hear Abbey Road in such a way that I had no idea existed. I put side one of the SHS I just got and my eyes popped out and my jaw dropped and I went ‘WTF’ was that.
Some of the extended bass rumbles on Come Together really made me smile and go ‘whoa.’
I know what my UK 1st pressing sounds like and I always thought that it was special in comparison to others l’d heard, like the MFSL and Japanese Pro Use.
So now I’m listening to yours somewhat in disbelief. The end of side one just about blew the windows out of the house! Then I put my UK copy on. By comparison, it just sounded flat… but on its own it sounds good.
What an amazing discovery. You are completely correct in your assessment of these ’69 UK pressings.
Thanks again,
Michel
P.S.
Over the last couple of years I did what I thought was a lot of research on which Abbey Road pressing to purchase for the best experience… and nobody ever mentioned the version that you sell.
Michel,
This letter warms our hearts. We’ve known that the original Abbey Road pressings are not the end-all and be-all that some audiophiles and record collectors think they are, and of course the same is true for the legendary Toshiba Pro-Use and MFSL discs.
Been there, done that, left them in the dust a long time ago. Now you know why. You own the pressing that trounces them all.
The fact that no one recommends the pressings we sell as superior to those commonly touted by the so-called experts just confirms that the work we do is difficult and simply cannot be accomplished without a staff and a budget, which, of course, no one in the audiophile or record collecting world has — staff or budget — besides us.
And that what we do is important. Essential even.
As we are the only operation dedicated to this kind of work, with either the staff or the budget it takes to succeed, it is not surprising that no one has figured out the key to Abbey Road. It took us a very long time too. As you may have read elsewhere on the blog:
Skeptical thinking has been key to our success from the very start, and it can be key to your success too. To understand records, you need to think about them critically, not naively, in order to get very far in this devilishly difficult hobby we have chosen for ourselves.
Our first big shootout was 2007, and since then we have carried out at least two dozen more for the album, making a lot of Beatles’ fans happy in the process. We helped them spend their money on something that will give them lifelong pleasure.
As for the original sounding flat, you may have seen this too:
Shootouts are the only way to answer the most important question in all of audio: “compared to what?”
Without shootouts, how can you begin to know what are the strengths and weaknesses of the copies you own?
Now that you have done your own shootout, you know how flat your copy was all along — but, as you say, “on its own it sounds good.”
This is the kind of progress in audio we love to hear about.
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