I checked out my father's CD of Abbey Road. He no longer had the jewel case, but I think it's from the mid 90's. I compared it to the new version on his system, which is Canton Ergo speakers with a Yamaha integrated (old stuff) and it was quite easy to hear that the midrange was pushed and the CD louder.
But the older CD is more balanced and there is more detail to be heard. Not only that, but vocals on the older CD have more weight and sound better, while the remaster's vocals are thin. Still, the midrange is the real culprit. The remaster sounds almost distorted by comparison. My friend, who agrees with me on this, says "louder isn't better, but it can create that perception." He's also gone back to older recordings and his LP blows away this so-called remaster.
I've now heard the remaster on three different systems. It doesn't sound good in the car either! If I hadn't had some confirmation from others I might have though the CD was flawed.
After checking around I did find folks on Amazon and elsewhere who are hearing the same flaws, so I feel a "little" less crazy now!
Thanks for the comments.
Rob
But the older CD is more balanced and there is more detail to be heard. Not only that, but vocals on the older CD have more weight and sound better, while the remaster's vocals are thin. Still, the midrange is the real culprit. The remaster sounds almost distorted by comparison. My friend, who agrees with me on this, says "louder isn't better, but it can create that perception." He's also gone back to older recordings and his LP blows away this so-called remaster.
I've now heard the remaster on three different systems. It doesn't sound good in the car either! If I hadn't had some confirmation from others I might have though the CD was flawed.
After checking around I did find folks on Amazon and elsewhere who are hearing the same flaws, so I feel a "little" less crazy now!
Thanks for the comments.
Rob