Well, I just picked up an original pressing of Joni Mitchell Blue. I’ve been working on the song ‘River’ as a beginning piano student. I mainly listen to Classical. I think the last time I bought a non classical lp was in 1980. Supertramp Breakfast In America
Your Not-So-Obvious Best Fidelity LPs
I’ve spent over three years building up to the system I have now. I’m really happy with it and my wife and I love sitting in our listening room spinning various vinyl most evenings. Rather than researching and testing gear, I want to spend this year adding great recordings to our collection.
So what are the albums you have that every time you play it you're continually amazed at its fidelity? You might have spent $80 on it or just $1 or maybe it was a hand-me-down decades ago. Any genre really.
And if we can please avoid the most obvious choices (which are truly wonderful) such as Pink Floyd, The Eagles, Diana Krall, etc. I’m looking for albums, (vinyl only please) that probably fly under the radar for most folks.
I'll start….
James Taylor - Dad Loves His Work - this was just given to me by a friend a couple of weeks ago as he had an extra copy. I have plenty of JT albums but I didn’t have this one yet. As soon as I put it on I could tell it was special.
Edie Brickell - Shooting Rubberbands at the Stars - My wife requested this one so I found a NM copy on Discogs for a reasonable price. This kind of blew my socks off. Sounds really wonderful and present and the music still holds up.
Counting Crows - August and Everything After - I surprised my wife with this one as it’s one of her favorite albums. They really nailed the recording and pressing on this one. It’s quite impressive.
Ben Folds - What Matters Most - He’s one of our favorite songwriters but trying to find a copy of anything of his or Ben Folds Five for under $80 is nearly impossible. This album was released just last year and they obviously paid special attention to the recording quality. Sounds just phenomenal.
Steely Dan - Northeast Corridor - Obviously everyone knows how amazing their studio recordings are but this album might be unknown to some as it came out just a few years ago. I bought it on a whim knowing nothing about it. It’s amazing. As if they would release an album with less than stellar fidelity. If you’re a Dan fan, this album is a no-brainer.
REM - Automatic for the People - Completely hypnotic. Stunning recording.
OK, that’s enough from me.
@mahler123 please feel free to suggest your favorite classical LPs that have stunning fidelity. I know so little about classical but I would love to add some great recordings to my collection. Who else has some contributions? |
Any of the RCA Living Stereo lps will do, particularly ones featuring Fritz Reiner and the Chicago Symphony or Arthur Rubinstein. Mercury Living Presence lps and the Everest records cut with 35 mm film tape. Decca lps of the early stereo era, harder to get in the U.S., are also excellent. By the seventies, those labels had slipped and were working with terrible vinyl. Phillips and Deutche Grammophone then rose to the top with quiet surfaces. I always prefered Phillips, particularly Haitink conducting and Claudio Arrau and Alfred Brendel, pianists. DG had von Karajan, but they were always somewhat problematic in the bass. Early music labels such as Telefunken Die Alte Worke and Decca L’ouiseau Lyre were treasured for their repertoire, but the recordings were more hit and miss, veering towards harshness |
Thanks @mahler123 really appreciate your insights and recommendations. Time to hit Discogs to see if I can find a couple of these! looking forward to hearing from others as well…..any genre of your favorites with unbelievable fidelity. |
@grislybutter @bigtwin @winoguy17 thank you for your suggestions. Really appreciate it as these would otherwise not be on my radar. |
@czarivey hmmm….not to me. I get that this is subjective and not factual. I was just trying to stay away from the usual, Hell Freezes Over, Aja, DSOM, Live in Paris sort of albums that we usual see with these kinds of threads. Happy to see some different submissions and looking forward to some more. I’m sorry these are not novel to you but perhaps there will be in subsequent posts. |
Shostakovich: Symphony #9, on Everest label (SDBR 3054). I believe Everest recorded to 35mm sproketed magnetic tape. Really robust format. Recently listened to it and I was amazed at the recording and playback quality. Grateful Dead: Reckoning. The Acoustic Sounds reissue. Live, acoustic set. Excellent recording by Dan Healy. Legrand Jazz. The Impex reissue. Beautiful recorded in 1958 at the famed Columbia 30th St. studio.French arranger Michael Legrand assembled various jazz musicians including Miles Davis, John Coltrane and Ben Webster to perform his arrangements of jazz standards. |
Thank you so much @bdgregory @hertzhead Much appreciated! |
Not so obvious, but, indeed, records pressed and released in the 90s may have the best mastering and sound and here’s my list of such: Sasha and John Digweed -- Northern Exposure David Bowie -- EarthLing (original 1995 release on vinyl) Depeche Mode -- Ultra (original 1997 release on vinyl) Stan Getz -- Appasionado Bohren & Der Club of Gore -- Midnight Radio (1995 release on vinyl and CD) The last one mentioned is an incredible nearly 3 hours album done mainly on low frequencies and with very slow tempo like around 30bpm. Some of those records above may have 4-figure price if not now, then in the very near future.
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@paulietunes cool thread! |
@roadwhorerecords @grislybutter @czarivey thank you for those contributions! Hope to get to hear some of these on my system in the near future. Who else has some suggestions for us to hear? |
What a great post paulietunes, interesting and thought provoking. Thanks to bigtwin, I listened to Miles Davis In A Silent Way last night (via Qobuz), never heard this record before, absolutely fantastic! I am going to make my way through everyone's recommendations. The joy of finding new music. |
@mgattmch thank you! I’m enjoying this, too, and hopefully this post will continue to receive more recommendations. Good to spend the winter getting exposed to different music and building up the collection with great recordings. |
I have often sung the praises of a series of recordings made by Nonesuch back in the 70's. Some are called "Spectrum New American Music". These recordings are quite amazing with regards to soundstage, imaging and the preproduction of other spatial cues. If you want to hear what a realistic, natural sounding soundstage sounds like, these recordings will do that. I can easily imagine getting up from my listening seat, and walking into the soundstage among the musicians. I listen to plenty great sounding rock recordings, but recordings like these are qualitatively on a different level. And the thing is, these were a budget label when they were released. Not in the least bit considered "audiophile". Musically, YMMV, since these tend to be pretty 'thorny' and atonal sounding (I love it!). They all tend to have this visual format:
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Thank you @simonmoon ! I'm going to order a couple of these. |
At the last Capital Audiofest, I spent a lot of time hanging out with and helping Phillip O'Hanlon, who was exhibiting Graham speakers. He is known for his vast and eclectic collection of LPs. I brought for him to hear a record from my collection that he immediately went on line to purchase from Discogs. It is David Peabody's "Americana" collection of folk music (Peabody is an Englishman who is a big fan of American folk music). This record is quite cheap on Discogs, but, it is incredibly well recorded I use the track "Sewing Machine Blues" as one of my standard demonstration tracks. |
Thanks for that @larryi I see that in Discogs. |
@kerrybh I've hear that SRV album and it's really fabulous. Plus I need a better copy of Abrades than the one I currently own. |
I also find many direct to disc records to deliver superb sound (the master lacquer is cut live and direct from the mixing board without an intervening tape recording). Sheffield Records and M & K Realtime made many good sounding examples. I particularly like M & K’s Bill Berry Allstar “For Duke” record and their Earl Hines “Fatha.” Sheffield examples include Thelma Houston’s “I’ve Got the Music in Me” and Amanda McBroom’s “Growing Up in Hollywood Town.” |
@larryi Ditto for Three Blind MIce and Yamamoto Trio's "Midnight Sugar." |
For classical music, consistently very good sounding records were produced by the label Lyrita (exclusively British composers); I have never heard even a so-so Lyrita. For 1950-60’s, RCA and Mercury recordings are also mostly good. Some of the best chamber music recordings I’ve heard came from a very obscure East German label called NOVA. When I want to show that stereo recordings have not really improved since the late 1950’s, and early 1960’s, I play some original “six eye” Columbia records, such as, Duke Ellington’s “Blues in Orbit” or Dave Brubeck’s “Take Five.” Both of these have been reissued a number of times but sound best in the original version. When I want to show how good mono recordings sound, I play Sonny Rollins’ “Saxophone Colossus”. |
Jakob Dylan - Seeing Things Ian Dury - New Boots and Panties In classical Haendel Duetti et Cantate Da Camera on Harmonia Mundi is one I keep coming back to along with... The Film Music of Ingmar Bergman (Mozart, Chopin, Handel, Scarlatti) by Kabi Lareti on Proprius - difficult to find now and unfortunately Proprius's vinyl was never very good even when new. But the recording is outstanding. |
If you want to immerse yourself in great controversy, google "hot stamper" or the company selling these records--Better Records The claim is that, even within a particular issue of an album, there are certain stampers that are better than others and the resulting pressings are the ones to covet. Some hot stampers go for thousands of dollars. I have not bought any of these hot stampers myself. However, long before hot stampers became a thing, a friend played two very clean versions of a particular record--both original pressings, both with same covers, dead-wax markings, etc., yet one sounded much more alive and vibrant. Were the two records from different pressing plants? Was this an example of a "hot stamper" vs. an ordinary stamper? I don't know, but, sort of thing adds more complications when hunting down versions of favorite albums. |
Out of so many, just a very few of my favorites: Any of the Sheffield Labs, Direct-to-Disc recordings of 3-4 decades ago. (they're all over the internet at ridiculously low prices) Linda Ronstadt - "What's New" (with the Nelson Riddle Orchestra) Jennifer Warnes - "Famous Blue Raincoat" (or anything else she's done) Tower of power - "Live and in Living Color" Stephan Grappelli / Barney Kessel - "I Remember Django" Oscar Peterson - "We Get Requests" |
Deep Purple--Made in Japan Supertramp--Crime of the Century Michael Franks--Passion Fruit Loggins & Messina--Full Sail Emerson, Lake & Palmer Eva Cassidy--Live At Blues Alley Rickie Lee Jones Rickie Lee Jones--Girl At Her Volcano Poco--Legend Janis Ian--Breaking Silence Tanika Tikaram--Sweet Keeper Nylons--One Size Fits All Chris Isaak--San Francisco Days Neil Young--Live At Massey Hall Elton John--Tumbleweed Connection Chris Jones--Roadhouses & Automobiles Basia--Time & Tide Heart--Dreamboat Annie Eagles--Hotel California
Pat Metheny & Lyle Mays--Wichita Falls Marcus Miller--Free Marcus Miller--Silver Rain Stanley Clarke--East River Drive Stanly Clarke Gregory Porter--Be Good George Benson--Bad Benson Michael Hedges--Beyond Boundaries Kenny G--New Standards Herbie Hancock--River Anne Bisson--Blue Mind Josefine Cronholm--Wild Garden Ozone Percussion Group--La Bamba Manhattan Transfer--Extensions Christian McBride--Gettin’ To It Michael Franks--Time Together Rob McConnell & the Boss Brass--Big Band Jazz GRP Fusion Weather Report--Heavy Weather
Alison Krauss--Forget About It Sandi Patti--More Than Wonderful Dianne Reeves--Never Too Far Dianne Reeves--Quiet After the Storm Vanessa Fernandez--Use Me Sade--Promise Mannheim Steamroller--Fresh Air (all albums) Stevie Ray Vaughn--Double Trouble Lyle Lovett--Joshua Judges Ruth The Wallin’ Jennys--40 Days Luther Vandross--Dance With My Father
Again, all albums good music in addition to the great sound. Bob
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itsjim, We agree on Sheffield D-to-D recordings, although I find some of the music to be so-so. The same goes with other D-to-D recording companies, such as M & K Realtime. I like the other non- D-to-D records you recommend, particularly the "What's New" suggestion. I have a few more suggestions of records with both good sound and music: Kate and Anna McGarrigle (self titled) Hubert Sumlin: "Blues Party" Cowboy Junkies: "Black-Eyed Man" |