More of the music of Joaquín Rodrigo (1901-1999)
In 2010 we did a shootout for this title and thought we had found a good one. We wrote:
A good side one backed with a lovely side two! We shot out a stack of these recently and side two of this copy was one of the few sides that really impressed us. The sound is transparent and full of energy. Side one is pretty good but a bit crude in the louder passages.
This is a wonderful record. The performance here by the first family of guitar is legendary. More importantly, the music is delightful and belongs in any serious classical collection.
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RFR-1 stampers. What the best originals like this one give you is immediacy. The attack of the guitar is more real.
Comparing this with the Golden Import shows you that some of the transients are smoothed over on that pressing.
If you’ve got the front end that can deal with the Mercury upper midrange and transient attack, the strings will sound textured and clear, not harsh or shrill. (A badly mastered version of this record would make your ears bleed.)
More importantly, this copy captures the sounds of the guitars perfectly. I doubt if anybody could do it as well as Mercury.
Recently we did the shootout again and came up with very different findings:
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Now those same stampers are tubey and weighty, but the strings are too hot (bright and shrill) and flat (lacking richness).
We can sum up the sound of these stampers — on a different copy of course, something to keep in mind — in one word:
Ouch.
Please allow us to help you avoid making the same mistakes we did:
What’s So Golden About These Imports Anyway?
And by the way, we would never even bother to reserve the studio time to play a Golden Import pressing these days. I can count on one hand the titles that actually sound good to me and it’s just not worth the labor to find the one out of fifty that has hi-fidelity sound as we currently define it.
This commentary gets at our disappointed feelings about the label.

More of the music of Joaquín Rodrigo (1901-1999)