Whats on your turntable tonight?


For me its the first or very early LP's of:
Allman Brothers - "Allman Joys" "Idyllwild South"
Santana - "Santana" 200 g reissue
Emerson Lake and Palmer - "Emerson Lake and Palmer"
and,
Beethoven - "Piano Concerto No. 4 in G Major" Rudolph Serkin/Ozawa/BSO
slipknot1

Holly Golightly And The Brokeoffs – Nobody Will Be There (Damaged Goods 2011)

Stunning album. One of my favorites.

@td_dayton 

+1 on Badfinger
Favorite song: Name Of The Game. @slaw turned me on to a cover by Susanna Hoffs, with Aimee Mann. So good, worth a stream if you can. Cheers!

Kenny Burrell with Coleman Hawkins  -  Bluesey Burrell

Paul Simon  -  One Trick Pony

Ringo Star  -  Ringo   This is Ringo's first solo album.  I bought it right after it came out, in 1973 and it has only been played on a quality turntable and cartridge (my first real high-fidelity system).  Still sounds like new.  A very well produced album, Recorded at Sunset Sound in Los Angeles and Apple Studios in London.  Mastering by (a very young) Doug Sax at The Mastering Lab in Los Angeles.  Includes a fabulous 20-page 12' X 12" booklet inside of the gatefold jacket.  What a treasure this album is.  I was nineteen at the time and was dating a girl who was 16 (still is a friend of mine) so the song 'You're Sixteen' inspired me to buy the album.  I am so glad that I did.

re: "bridge of sighs"...i've had 3 or 4 thrifted/dollar bin copies here over the years. all clean. not a single one sounded very good to me. it's not my favorite album so no great loss to me but can confirm that it's hard to find one that sounds "right" ( if it exists at all). i find it fascinating that i have an art blakey record that looks like it went through a washing machine and still sounds unbelievably good, but a 70's mainstream rock record like the trower can look factory fresh and sound like a napster download. that's just the record game i guess.

speaking of old rock i'm listening to badfinger "straight up" right now. a personal favorite 

 

 

Some here may remember that MFSL was in the process of pressing Bridge of Sighs on lp. Only the SACD made it into production. 

@spiritofradio

James, anything from Fleetwood Mac prior to Stevie Nicks is their best music.  I will give them excellence to the album "Rumors", though.  That is really quite good.  Kiln House and Then Play On are my favorites, by far.  Completely different music than the pop version of the band, which is about when Stevie Nicks came on board.

I saw them play in 1972 and then again much later, after the album Tusk came out.  What a world of difference.  1972 was a superb concert.  The Tusk concert was rather boring, the same long-winded screaming guitar stuff and Stevie Nicks bellowing like a sick cow. (sorry for the strong opinion here).

I was fortunate to have seen Robin Trower perform the Bridge Of Sighs concert in 1974, just after the album released.  Roughly center stage and about 10 rows from the stage.  Very memorable.

Friday Music did a reissue but I have no idea if it was properly mastered/plated/pressed and if the SQ is much better.  It's no longer available as new and I can find only two NM/M- used at $60 and $225 (some people are beyond ridiculous).

Anyway, I'll keep one of my copies and give the other to my brother-in-law.  I cherish the music and will listen at a lower volume.  That always helps with lesser SQ albums. 

@loomisjohnson James Dewar was the best! He was really shy and wouldn’t get out front so maybe the shallow inpercipients running the rock promotion mafia back then didn’t help. We know though. Who’s got a better voice to let microphones and a PA fill a stadium? I can’t think of one. He did it effortlessly.

Thank you for the clarification on the Fleetwood Mac.  I don’t know anything about that band.  I see though that maybe Stevie Nicks wasn’t on that record so might give it a try.  

@mammothguy54 @loomisjohnson

Bridge of Sighs in my top 10 all time favorite records. I only have my OP and I guess I never noticed it was really that badly produced. It still conveys an atmosphere and so much feeling and soul so I guess somebody did something to get that across. It’s interesting, on a record like Layla, for example, the bad production is so bad I can’t play it on my good stereo. But records like Montrose or Bridge of Sighs I don’t really care. If somebody redid BOS to improve it I’d sure buy it though.

Learn To Smile Again - Susie Arioli Band

Find this album addictive 
 

@bobby1945 

Hadn't ever heard of this before.  Very nice.  Thanks for posting.  

@spiritofradio, we were talking fleetwood mac's "future games," which i'd rate as my second favorite behind "kiln house" and just ahead of "bare trees", though i'm occasionally persuaded that "then play on" is their pinnacle.

@mammothguy54, i'm with you on "bridge of sighs"--it is one terribly-produced record. odd that no one rates james dewar among the great white soul singers, but he was pretty formidable.

just been listening to the go-betweens "before hollywood." incredible record.

@bslon 

Crack The Sky / Safety In Numbers
1978 Lifesong

Argent / In Deep
1973 Epic

Wishbone Ash / Argus
1972 MCA

 

Terrific set Bro!   +++1

 

having trouble putting things in quotes   Sorry   

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

@loomisjohnson 

i wasn't the biggest bob welch fan, but the title track is a classic + danny kirwan was a genius.

 

?   What album are you discussing here?  Thanks   

 

Neil Young / Harvest
1972 Warner Bros.

Terrific content, fidelity, typical outstanding Neil Young recording. Backed by The Stray Gators, The London Symphony Orchestra and appearances by other familiar names. Often called his signature album.


Linda Ronstadt / Greatest Hits Volume Two
1980 Asylum

Nice song selections, surprising good SQ.

An interesting mix of old and new albums, today.

Fleetwood Mac  -  Then Play On   Got this one back in 1971 or 72.  It saw many plays on my parents Magnavox console, and sounds it (very noisy vinyl).  I have the early US issue that has 'Oh Well' on it.  Not too many of these were made.  Awesome album, I will have to get the double LP issue, once it comes off of backorder.

Robin Trower  -  Bridge of Sighs   This is my second attempt at hopefully getting a good sounding copy.  They both sound terrible.  Damn it, I love the album.

Oscar Peterson Trio  -  We Get Requests   AP/QRP Verve reissue.  Wonderful!

Earl Klugh & Bob James  -  Two Of A Kind   Great modern jazz album.  Great SQ.

Blue Stingrays  -  Surf-N-Burn   Got this a few weeks ago (thanks to this thread) and am enjoying it several times now.  Great surf music album!

Dimeola McLaughlin De Lucia  -  Saturday Night In San Francisco.  This is my fourth time to play this new acquisition during the past few weeks.  Impex really knows how to produce a fine piece of vinyl.  Wish I could have been at that concert.

Steel Dan  -  Everything Must Go   Third time I have played this recent acquisition.  Of course, there is plenty of digital recording for this album, it was made in 2003.  But man, the mastering for analog (vinyl) and the plating/pressing is phenomenal.  One the very best studio albums for demo of your system.  And of course, the music is fantastic, especially the title track.  The bass and kick drum on this album are just stunning.  

The Kinks - Arthur Or The Decline and Fall of the British Empire

1969/1975 Reprise Records Reissue

I have a 2014 Cosmos version on Fantasy pressed at QRP that sounds pretty good. It's  the same year as the Analog Productions release and both were pressed at QRP. Same lacquer? Maybe.

 

the best of the delmore brothers on starday records...a dollar bin masterpiece

Cosmos Factory is reissued and available on Fantasy Label.  But that's not an Analogue Productions record.  Oh well, I'll flip a coin.

Thanks for the information, Spencer.

@mammothguy54 

Spencer, is that Cosmos Factory worthy of the purchase?  AP typically does a very good job, but I thought to ask your opinion before I jump in with a purchase. 

Discogs says ~$100, I paid $30-$35 new back in the day. If it's $40 in print, yes it's worth it. It's Hoffman/Gray, hard to beat. I think I like their Green River even more. But for $100 used? Not that high on my favs list to justify for me. Would rather sell you mine for $90 ;-)

Sir Adrian Boult conducts Vaughan Williams - Pastoral Symphony (No. 3) / In The Fen Country (Symphonic Impression). New Philharmonia Orchestra. Angel 1968
 

Pomp and Circumstance Marches, Op. 39 (Nos. 1 to 5) Sir Edward Elgar

Suite - Things To Come. Welcome To The Queen

Conducted by Sir Arthur Bliss (London Symphony Orchestra)

1958 RCA Victor

In memorial to the Queen

Benjamin Britten - War Requiem

Britten conducts The London Symphony Orchestra, London Symphony Chorus, The Bach Choir, Highgate School Boy's Choir, & Dietrich Fischer-Dieskau

London Records 2LP box 1963

@sbank

Spencer, is that Cosmos Factory worthy of the purchase?  AP typically does a very good job, but I thought to ask your opinion before I jump in with a purchase.  It has been on my radar, so what do you have to say?

David Gray - "Mutineers"

Again! May be my most played album of the last year or two.

The GoGos + The High Women + The Mamas & The Papas = The Feminine Complex