Songs You Couldn't Stand Until You Heard Them On A Good System


Just heard Talking Heads Psycho Killer on my current system for the first time..Never been able to listen to more than the fist 30-45 seconds until now..Before what was a mass of screeching cats is now a coherent,highly musical interaction between synthesizers & bass guitar that finally lend the emotional intensity this track needs to relate to the antagonist...
Anyone else?
freediver
That's interesting, as that's often considered a pretty bad mix. Typical of early CD's it was heavily compressed. Did you hear a remix?

Best,
E
So just went and checked. Yes, there is a remix as well as a remade DVD/Bluray.

I'm listening to it now. I don't remember the screeching, but the bass seems better. Not earth shatteringly better. The entire percussive lines could use more expansion and less mid-bass IMHO. In Burning Down the House, there are still several sections where you wish it was explosive and it really isn't.

Best,
E

Actually it was some obscure live recording Pandora threw at me...Didn’t notice if it was from DVD or where honestly but it is superbly recorded..
It is not only about quality, it is also about musicality, tonality and how "natural" the music sounds, that affects if you like the music or not. 24 years back when I got a Bose AM5 Series II (ahem!) system with Yamaha+Kenwood+Technics, I tried some classical and jazz. Somehow I did not like that music and simply didn't care about it. Fast forward 12 years and I set up a real system with Quad+NAD+Marantz and it was a totally different ball game! I started collecting classical and jazz music along with vocals that sounded boring on my previous system. With my current system,it is even more involving.
Point is - if the music sound "natural", you gravitate towards it and love it. Think of what happens when you are out and about, say in a park, or in the streets and you hear a (one man band) person with a guitar or a set of drums. No matter what they play, you stand there and listen intently. Does it matter which genre of music that person plays? At least in my case, I don't care. All I care about how lovely it sounds and how it gets your toes tapping. So, the "better" your system gets, the more you listen to it. Unfortunately that comes at an expense - both - money wise and the quality of recording wise. Poor recordings are laid bare, but at least you can admire the musicality, if not the quality.
Never been a Sinatra fan,IMO Dean M. was not only THE voice of the Rat Pack but most exemplified that lifestyle...