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
Love your selection Slitknot.Gubankians are top notch.
I like the Shostakovitch too.I have that one.

tonight:

Al Stewart "Year of the Cat"

Purcell "Tavern Songs" Deller/ Harmonia Mundi
Britten "War Requiem" Rattle/Birmingham/Tear/Allen EMI
Holst "Savitri"" Janet Baker/Imogen Holst Argo
Handel "Coronation Anthems" Kings College/Willcocks Argo
"The Best Of Don Williams" Volume lll MCA
"Me and the Blues Joe Williams" RCA
"Things Are Getting Better" Cannonball Adderley with Milt Jackson 45rpm
"Going Home" The L.A. Four EW
"Louis Armstrong & Duke Elllington" Roulette
"Satchmo Play King Oliver" Audio Fidelity 45 rpm
Emorrisiv-

The "Savitri" with Janet Baker. One of my favorites! Not only is it a wonderful performance, it is one of my go to recordings for testing a systems ability to image properly.

I love the Argo "Coronation Anthems" too. Outstanding choices!!
Thanks Slipknot: The Holst "Savitri" is a special recording.One of the best I know of for testing soundstage,complete with moving singers.

I just got a couple of new (NOS)Harmonia Mundis:

"Danses Du Moyen-age" Clemencic/Ensemble Ricore
"La Rensaissance Anglais" The English Rensaissance/
Alfred Deller Consort

These are steller recordings in typical Harmonia Mundi style.
Open,transparent engaging. The Deller is a real eye opener.

also: English Sacred Music of the 16th Century/ Everest/ a very early Tallis Scholars (1977)
Excellent recording from one of the premier professional English choirs

cheers

e
Witches' Brew - Gibson/NewSOLondon, RCA LSC 2225 -45 (45rpm reissue from Classic Records)...

Great impact and tonal color, and a far superior mastering to the earlier 33rpm reissue from Classic Records. While this is a Kenneth Wilkinson engineered recording from 1958, it clearly is an early experiment in multi-miking. And with that multi-miking comes great instrumental impact. Probably why is has been so famous over the years.

Yet, unlike the amazing orchestral sound staging found the the "The Power of the Orchestra" RCA VICS 2659 also engineered by Kenneth Wilkinson for RCA, Witches' Brew has little to no sound stage depth and instruments pull forward to the front edge of the orchestra as the miking knobs are diddled. If you value a natural perspective on the orchestra, by all means get the remarkable "The Power of the Orchestra" in a superb 45rpm reissue from Analog Productions. And value Witches' Brew for the instrumental color and slam it provides with some wonderful pieces of music very nicely performed by Gibson and the New Symphony Orchestra of London.
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Emorrisiv-

I am constantly amazed at how our listening preferences seem to dovetail each others! I have the two Harmonia Mundi recordings you mention above, and "Danses Du Moyen-age" spends a lot of time on my turntable.

I will keep my eye out for a copy of "English Sacred Music of the 16th Century"

As my good friend Rushton just posted, I concur whole heartedly with his assesment of "Witches Brew" and "Power of the Orchestra". Two other reisuues that are seeing of lot of play right now at our house.
Ella Fitzgerald - Sings Cole Porter Songbook

New Order - Substance

Blondie - Best of Blondie

Elton John - Capt Fantastic

The Police - Outlandos D'Amour

Tom Petty - Damn the Torpedos

Led Zeppeline - Physical Graffiti
Ike & Tina Turner - "River Deep, Mountain High" [A&M '69, rec. '66]
The Everly Brothers - S/T [Rhino reissue '85, orig. '58]
Gene Clark - "Gene Clark With The Gosdin Brothers" [Sundazed reissue '00, orig. '67] The debut from the ex-lead singer/songwriter of the original Byrds is one the 60's greatest 'forgotten' albums IMHO, a must for any fan of the group and period folk-rock in general. This reissue of the rare LP improves on the original (as well as a prior inferior-sounding Columbia CD reissue) by adding a couple of previously-unreleased gems recorded a half year after the late-'66 album sessions plus a solo acoustic demo.
Peter & Gordon - "Hot Cold & Custard" [Capitol '68]
John Lennon/Plastic Ono Band - "Live Peace In Toronto 1969" [Apple '70]
The Hollies - "Moving Finger" [Epic '70]
Neil Young - "Time Fades Away" [Reprise '73]
Jacque Brel - S/T [Reprise '62]
Albert Collins - "Trash Talkin'" [Imperial '69]
Roy Meriwether Trio - "Soup & Onions" [Columbia '66]
Charlie Byrd - "Once More! Bossa Nova" [Riverside '63]
Duke Ellington's Spacemen - "The Cosmic Scene" [Columbia '59]
Ahmad Jamal - "Macanudo" [Argo '66, rec. '62] An atypical Jamal album in that his trio and usual pianistic introspection upon standards make way for exotique tunes and large-band Latin-orchestral arrangements by composer/conductor/bassist Richard Evans. The tiki cover is as groovy as the music (not to mention the sound).
John Eaton - "Electro Vibrations" [Decca '69?]
John Cale - Paris 1919
Miles Davis - KOB (I really don't ever get tired of this one)
Mel Brown - Chicken Fat

On deck:

Led Zeppelin II
Rush and Slipknot, your tastes are impeccable.

I am at the point where if it is a Harmonia Mundi it is going to be great, but add Alfred Deller and it is a no brainer.

Just got a copy of Vaughn Williams "The Sons of Light" and Hubert Parry's "Ode on the Nativity"/ Teresa Cahill,Bach Choir/Royal College of Music chorus/ London Phil./ Sir David Willcocks.
Mr. Wilkinson at work here, but no multi mikings. Indeed it has a wonderfuly wide and well defined sound stage. Sopranos left, altos right gentlemen in between.
These are pieces I am not at all familier with, probably because the VW is a secular text, and the Parry is fairly obscure, but wonderful all the same. The soprano solo is magical.

e
Aerosmith- Rocks. What a great album, not a bad track on it. A little thick sounding...I remember the first time I heard Steven Tyler scream "I'm Baaack". "I HAVE TO HAVE THAT!" I literally yelled out. I was in the back of a friends Aunt's car. It was a bi-centenial edition something. Aerosmith, from that point on, was my favorite band all through junior high. I still love the "old" Aerosmith. I played it for my 3 year old daughter tonight. I think she liked it!
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Eddie Costa's House of Blue Lights
MJQ's Live at the Lighthouse
and an old fave...
Miles Davis' Ascenseur pour l'echafaud (Elevator to the Scaoffold)
Bad Co

The Police - Synchronicity

Academy of St Martin in the Fields - Amadues Sountrack

Foo Fighters - Greatest Hits

Heart - Greatest Hits

ZZ Top - Tres Hombres

Dave Brubek - Time Out

The Beatles - Magical Mystery Tour
Wow Macdad- looks like you raided my LP stack! How does the Foo Fighters Greatest sound to you?
I'm shocked at how great it sounds. I thought that all of the tracks, or most, were digitally recorded, so I didn't expect that much, but the record is fantastic.

Plus, I really love Foo Fighters anyway, so....
Tomorrow is a BIG day - we've added a new member to the Walker Audio turntable family and several of us are descending on him for the day with lots of vinyl in tow. Three Walker owners, one TW-Acustic Raven owner and friends - vinyl nuts all. What vinyl am I hauling with me for the day? Ah, all wonderful stuff:

Royal Ballet Gala Performances, 45rpm reissue
The Reiner Sound (Ravel:Rapsodie Espagnole), 45rpm reissue
The Jung Trio, Dvorak Trio, Groove Note 45rpm
Rossini Overtures, Fone 45rpm
Rota, Concerto per archi, I Musici on Fone
Lee Morgan, Search for the New Land, Blue Note/Music Matters 45rpm reissue
Eric Dolphy, Out to Lunch, Blue Note/Music Matters 45rpm reissue
Louis Armstrong, St. James Infirmary, 45rpm reissue
Holst, Savitri, Argo
Holst, Double Concerto, Lyrita

Great day coming up!
Mandrill "IS"
Matrix "Wizard"
Gato Barbieri "Ruby"
Yamashta, Winwood, Shrive "Go"
Rush, that is some collection. I wish I could make your meeting.

btw- I forgot to mention in my last post that the VW/Parry was a Lyrita.

cheers

e
"Instruments of the Middle Ages and Renaissance" - David Munrow and the Early Music Consort, EMI SLS 988 (a multi-LP collection of short pieces, each highlighting a different instrument or collection of instruments, but marvelous MUSIC, not just demonstration of instrument sound. Includes a marvelous book on the music and the instruments of the middle ages.)
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Cat Stevens "Tea for the Tillerman" MoFI original series of half speed masters circa 1980

Christy Moore "Unfinished Revolution" Wea records
Just won this off ebay straight from Ireland. Like all the Christy Moores a wonderful pressings and recording.

Jennifer Warnes "Famous Blue Raincoat" original pressing
Cheap Trick- Dream Police. Rockin' Power-Pop at its best. There are some REALLY great tracks on this LP. Need Your Love, Gonna Raise Hell, Voices, there is not a bad track on it.
Buzzcocks - "Another Music In A Different Kitchen" [UA UK '78]
Buzzcocks - "Love Bites" [UA UK '78]
Buzzcocks - "Singles Going Steady" [Liberty UK '79]
Buzzcocks - "A Different Kind Of Tension" [IRS '80]
Buzzcocks - "Parts One, Two, Three" [IRS '80]

Morning after listening, saw 'em again last night in Baltimore, this tour highlighting only the vintage stuff including the first two albums in their entirety (some of the deep cuts on which I've never heard them play live before), tour dates at buzzcocks.com
Feeling 16 again!
Bog, I just picked one of those up recently. I paid $1.00 for it! A nice and fun album. I especially like the "theme from Baretta". I'm old.

e
Emo, you are correct! It is a fun album. Tonight it is the two greatest jazz recordings ever, Coltrane "Blue Train" and Miles "Kinda Blue"
Beach Boys - Made in USA (found it today, I don't think it had ever been played!!)

Black Sabbath - Paranoid (180g)

The Cult - Electric

The Cult - Love (180g)

Jimmy Hendrix - Valley's of Neptune

New Pornographers - Twin Cinema

AC/DC - Back in Black (180g)
The The - Dusk - man what an underrated songwriter and performer

Radiohead - In Rainbows - why am I just starting to love this record?

Ben Webster/Sweets Edison - Wanted to do one Together

Peter Gabriel - Scratch My Back - the remake of Arcade Fire is soulstirring
Chopin - Selected Mazurkas, Nocturnes and a Ballad performed by Ivan Moravec, piano - Connoisseur Society CS 2122 (I confess an abiding love of listening to Ivan Moravec play Chopin. His playing is so intelligent, so beautifully wrought. For me, his interpretations and playing are perfection. Add to this the superb production values brought to these Connoisseur Society recordings by the inimitable producer Alan Silver and you get a marvelous listening experience.)
Oscar Peterson featuring Stephane Grappelli, double LP on Prestige. I often overlook this record in my jazz collection, but tonight I it is hittin the spot. The sweet spot!
Grover Washington Jr. "Winelight"
Genesis "Selling England by the pound"
Genesis "Wind and Wuthering"
Alan Parsons Project "Tales of mystery and imagination"
King Crimson "In the court of the Crimson King"
Buddy Holly - The Complete Recordings

Nina Simone - Black is the Color of My True Love..

Badfinger - Straight Up

Boston

Stevie Wonder - Talking Book
Eric Clapton- Slowhand, 461 Ocean Blvd
Marshall Tucker- Carolina Dreams
Rory Block- House of Hearts
Rickie Lee Jones- The Magazine
ZZ Top- Eliminator
"The World of Flatt & Scruggs" on vinyl. Now playing "The Ballad of Jed Clampett". Those dudes can certainly shred a banjo.
Yardbirds. Originals. Not a mix. Relf, Dreja, McCarty, Samwell-Smith, Topham, Clapton, Beck, Page. WONDERFUL WORK.
I was about 12 Y.O. when this music was newly out there. It still rocks big time.
James Newton Howard and Friends (Sheffield Labs)
Stomu Yamashta, Steve Winwood, Michael Shrive "Go"
Gil-Scott Heron "I am new here"
Allman Bros. Live at Fillmore East
Mike Greene Band "Mirage"
Nice one, Srwooten. Love that album.

Rod Stewert - "Never a Dull Moment" (which I found today for for $2.99)
Beach Boys - Pet Sounds
Van Morrison - Saint Dominic's Preview
McCoy Tyner - The Real McCoy
Tchaikovsky "Symphony No. 6, in B Minor, Op. 74 "Pathetique"" Monteux/Boston Symphony Orchestra (RCA LSC-1901)

Beethoven "Symphonies No. 1 and No. 8" Ansermet/L'Orchestre De La Suisse Romande (London CS 6388)

Albeniz "Iberia" Ansermet/L'Orchestre De La Suisse Romande (London CS 6194)

Oscar Peterson Trio "At the Stratford Shakespearean Festival" (Verve UMV 2502) Mono
For tonight's listening:

Shostakovitch Symphony #1,"The age of Gold" RCA/ Martinon LSO
original 1959 pressing and quite extraordinary.

J.S. Bach "Magnificat" Proprius just arrived from Sweden.Typical Proprius;wonderful, but I like the Kings College reading better.

Sphere "Flight Path" Elektra Musician
If you have never heard this LP you owe it to yourself to find one and try it. Amazing recording by T.Monk's old mates.

Pelleas et Melisande collection Phillips/Zinman/Rotterdam phil.
A box set of incidental music for the famous play/opera. Sebelius,Faure,Schoenberg. The Faure is a particular favorite of mine and this LP has the rarely recorded soprano solo sung by Jil Gomez.Sublime

cheers

e
Sit: A friend went to see the current Yardbirds with McCarty and Dreja in concert yesterday and gave a very good report -- and he's not even a particularly big fan who owns the old records like I do (I'd planned to attend with him, but unfortunately wound up unable to make it).
Led Zeppelin - II Japanese Promo copy - WOW, best pressing I have ever heard. Like brand new too. I'm sorry I bought it, now that's all I want to buy is these super expensive Japanese pressings.

The Beatles - Beatles Forever (Hey Jude) another sublime Japanese pressing. It was worth the money.

Frank Sinatra - Live in Paris (MFSL) my first Frank on vinyl, a great place to start

Madeliene Peyroux - Bare Bones (MFSL) not my fav album of hers, but still better than most
"The Wall" - Pink Floyd

"Laudate II - Baroque music from the Duben Collection" - DrottingholmBarEns, UppsalaAcKammarkor, Anne-Sophie von Otter - Proprius PROP 7860 (a prize among all of my Baroque music LPs with a young and incomparable Anne-Sophie von Otter)
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I'm listening to some recent acquisitions tonight:

Dire Straits - Dire Straits
Mink DeVille - Return to Magenta
Mahavishnu Orchestra - The Inner Mounting Flame
David Bowie - Hunky Dory
Spencer Davis Group - Very Best Of...
Dr. John - Gris Gris
Bruce Springsteen - The Wild, the Innocent and the E Street Shuffle
Jack DeJohnette's Special Edition - Tin can alley.
I am getting in gear for the show at Montreal Jazz Festival Keith Jarret, Jack and Gary Peacock. I can't wait!