Why are so many albums poorly remastered onto cd


It seems like every time I read a review of a remastered album onto CD everybody just bags on the quality and from some of my experiences, rightfully so.The quality of music is going away so quickly, why is it so hard to remaster a album?
pinto72
"I think it is a deliberate--trying to match the loudness of current recordings via heavy use of compression"

No doubt many more recent remasters seem to do this compared to earlier CD versions.

I do not have a problem with increased loudness categorically. It all depends on the details of how it is achieved. Many early CDs did not make use of full dynamic range available in CD format well. Many newer remasters do. Its when waveforms are clipped in the recording that worse sound is inherent. Increased loudness does not always mean clipped waveforms, though it is most common in pop music these days similar to how popular music on 45s back in the day were never a popular format in regards to sound quality.
A lot of times the artist has a say in just how 'loud' he wants it to sound and that can impart a negative. He/she wants it to grab your attention in this sea of competing artists.

Also, a lot of the times the wrong 'master' tapes are used. I've read somewhere that a lot of audio recordings have several master labeled tapes and simply the wrong ones are used.

All the best,
Nonoise
It would be interesting to find out exactly how HD Tracks gets there Hi Rez stuff. Are they taken from original masters and remastered? Are the tracks just cleverly upsampled? Why are there differences in quality? I have seen some mainstream reviews claiming the Redbook CD sounds better the HD Track 24/96 or 24/192 issues.

Just curious. I'd like to know for sure before I buy.

Wouldn't it make since to remaster the originals before releasing them as HI Def? After all a bad sounding recording is going to stay a bad sounding recording whether it is Redbook, 24/96 or 24/192 isn't it?
There's this about HD Tracks:http://www.itrax.com/Pages/ArticleDetails.php?aID=32

And I thought the 'butterfly effect' had only to do with random, unintended consequences, not intentional ones.

All the best,
Nonoise
I also read that the latest Beatles release that was so highly touted as Hi Rez is merely a 24 bit remastering of the master tapes that was down converted to 16 bit.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1_(The_Beatles_album) see Remastering section

That's the extent of the purity of the latest Beatles CDs or downloads and yet most reviews go over the top claiming Hi Rez, but is it? The sound is better but their not getting blood out of a stone, just a damn good 16 bit recording.

Go figure. (If I misread or misunderstood the article, please set me straight)

There was a FLAC version on USB thumb drive in 44.1/24 but that's the extent of Hi Rez that the public got.

Marketing has its place.

All the best,
Nonoise