Hot Stamper Pressings of Arty Rock Albums Available Now
For big production rock albums such as this there are obvious problems that are heard on at least one or two sides of practically any copy of this four-sided album you might find on your turntable.
With so many heavily-produced instruments crammed into the soundfield, if the sound is at all veiled, recessed or smeared — problems common to 90+% of the records we play in our shootouts — the mix quickly becomes opaque, forcing the listener to work too hard to separate out the various elements of musical interest.
Irritation, if not exhaustion, is bound to follow.
Some general observations about the sound of the album:
- Transparency, clarity and presence are key.
- None of the British copies we played was thin and anemic.
- The domestic copies are made from dubs and can’t begin to compete.
- Almost all the copies we played had plenty of Tubey Magic and bottom end, so thankfully that was almost never a problem.
- They did however tend to lack top end extension and transparency, and many were overly compressed.
- There is plenty of tube compression being used in both the mixing and mastering, but most of the time it is working its magic to keep the bass big, punchy and loud.
Speaking of Tube Compression
Robert Ludwig used humungous amounts of tube compression on another favorite album of ours, and we’re glad he did. All that massive compression is at least partly responsible for it being one of the ten best sounding rock and pop albums ever made.
The sides that had sound that jumped out of the speakers, with driving rhythmic energy, worked the best for us. They really brought this complex music to life and allowed us to make sense of it. This is yet another definition of a Hot Stamper — it’s the copy that lets the music work as music. (more…)
