QRP pressing of "Tea for the Tillerman"


Got this first thing this morning and have a couple of spins through on it. This is simply INCREDIBLE! If this is what we have to look forward to from Chad and QRP, it's going to be a fantastic ride!

Probably the cleanest, quietest and most dynamic record I have heard. Hugh soundstage. I have several different copies of this LP and there are things I have never heard on this pressing.

Even if you don't like Cat Stevens, buy this to hear how records can and should be done...
128x128mofimadness
..surprised at the level of excitement for this release..

Promotion, promotion and a new toy...
I agree, Tea for Tillerman always was a good sounding album, the mastering was done right and it was sold in endless numbers. So you can find a decent one for a few bucks... I would understand this "hype" when it would be an album like a RCA Living Stereo which is impossible to get below 500 USD (CR made that and got all the hate of the professional record dealers), but Cat Stevens?
Probably we discover in that Hype the audiophile hope for something better, a no noise pressing, without the usual defects even in the remastering process...
"I am surprised at the level of excitement for this release of "Tea for the Tillerman". I was a fan of it in my teens, but heard it again a few years ago, and unlike many other old favorites, it sounded very dated."

then:

"I would understand this "hype" when it would be an album like a RCA Living Stereo which is impossible to get below 500 USD (CR made that and got all the hate of the professional record dealers), but Cat Stevens?"

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For the record, I'm largely in agreement with the above two opinions. Tea for the Tillerman is well known to be an excellent sounding record, whether it be the Island or the A&M pressing. Perhaps that is why Analogue Productions/Quality Record Pressing chose this title to remaster; ie: they knew absolutely that they could get a good sounding record, and one that could show-case their new record pressing facility.

So far the online response suggests that all pressings received to date have been excellent and likely better in both pressing quality and sonic quality when compared to any original.

My first thought when I heard that this Lp was going to be re-mastered was; "why?", when the originals are plentiful, cheaply found and they sound beautiful.

I disagree with the first quote from Roxy54 when he says the album sounds 'dated' to him.

I think that the message found in these lyrics can't possibly become dated. Why? Because the subject matter is timeless and as old as is the human race itself. Mainly the content ranges from dialogs between a father and his almost grown son (two songs; But I might Die Tonight, and Father and Son) and also to the search for something more in life than the here and now.

Knowing what we now know about Cat Stevens (his stage name)we know what choices he eventually made....(but had not made at the time of that album). And we know that discussions about -that- will likely take us off topic for this forum.

The second respondent, Syntax also brings up some useful topic. When will QRP and Analogue Productions use their obvious skills at remastering some rare and hard to find classical titles! I would only hope that this new operation does in fact work to that end.

As to the musical value that exists within the Lp, Tea for the Tillerman, I can only suggest that that must lie within the judgment of the individual listener.

Myself, while I do find that I can over play this Lp, that it is a valued title in my collection and that I am grateful to have found a better sounding copy.

Amazing. It betters the sound quality of those already excellent sounding A&M's out there.

-Steve
I agree Tea for the Tillerman is relatively easy to find in good condition. Not as easy as Rumors though and look at the excitement generated by that recent reissue. I ordered Tea and Folk Singer as much to check out the products from Chad's new facility as anything else. If they're as good as I've heard, I 'll be ordering more I'm sure.
This is one of my favorite albums and the quality of the
sound on the three pressings I currently own is excellent. I currently own three versions, A& M, Island, Island 180 GRAM.
I decided to purchase the QRP version as my system consists of Thor Audio premap, 150 watt tubed monoblocks
with Vandersteen 5 A's for speakers. I use a VPI Scoutmaster for a turntable. Since my system was so revealing I figured I'd take the plunge. The QRP pressing was very quiet and no doubt it is quality, but sounds no better than the ISland version or the 180 gram version
of Tea for the Tillerman. In the future I would purchase the QRP pressings but not for an LP that I already own
that sounds wonderful.