Bach Goldberg Variations, Glen Gould, for both CD and LP. Piano is the most difficult to reproduce(IMHO),and it is a very clean recording.
Dave
Dave
What recordings do you use?
Happy Holidays, Love Barney I find the palpability and midrange liquidity staggeringly good on this disc. I also use it to test bass response. Barney really gets down on this disc, and holds nothing back. Amazing vocal range, amazing recording. Cheers, John :-) |
When trying out new tubes in my system, I like to use Miles Davis and the Jazz Giants CD. I listen to hear how Milt Jackson's vibes ring out in the opening notes of the first cut and whether there is a relatively silent floor beneath Miles' trumpet when it first comes in. I then go on to John Fahey's Railroad I or Yellow Princess (LP or CD), to see if it sounds like a real guitar. Lately, I've been using a recording of Mahler's 4th: an arrangment for chamber ensemble conducted by Douglas Boyd that presents a lot of inner detail and different timbres, plus lets you judge how well a soprano sounds. |
For CD's Nat COle's Pick Yourself Up, right after "take a deep breath" you can hear Cole do that. For Vinyl Vaughn William's The Lark Ascending with Neville Marriner and the Academy of St. Martins in the Fields with Iona Brown on the Violin, you should be able to hear her semi-quavers as the Lark ascends A good copy of Bach's Tocata and Fugue in D major is also one of my standards |