Hot Stamper Living Stereo Orchestral Titles Available Now
Classic Records ruined this album, as anyone who has played some of their classical reissues would have expected.
Their version is dramatically more aggressive, shrill and harsh than the Shaded Dogs we’ve played, with almost none of the sweetness, richness and ambience that the best RCA pressings have in such abundance.
In fact their pressing is just plain awful, like most of the classical recordings they remastered, and should be avoided at any price.
Apparently, most audiophiles (including audiophile record reviewers) have never heard a top quality classical recording. If they had, Classic Records would have gone out of business immediately after producing their first three Living Stereo titles, all of which were dreadful and labeled as such by us way back in 1994. I’m not sure why the rest of the audiophile community was so easily fooled, but I can say that we weren’t, at least when it came to their classical releases.
We admit to having made plenty of mistaken judgments about their jazz and rock, and we have the we was wrong entries to prove it.
The last review we wrote for the remastered Scheherazade, which fittingly ended up in our Hall of Shame, with an equally fitting sonic grade of F.
TAS Super Disc list to this day? Of course it is!
With every improvement we’ve made to our system over the years, their records have managed to sound progressively worse. (This is pretty much true for all Heavy Vinyl pressings, another good reason for our decision to stop buying them in 2007.) That ought to tell you something.
Better audio stops hiding and starts revealing the shortcomings of bad records.



Hot Stamper Pressings of the Music of Jacques Offenbach Available Now




