| Title: | Welcome to the CD Notes Conference |
| Notice: | Welcome to COOKIE |
| Moderator: | COOKIE::ROLLOW |
| Created: | Mon Feb 17 1986 |
| Last Modified: | Fri Mar 03 1989 |
| Last Successful Update: | Fri Jun 06 1997 |
| Number of topics: | 1517 |
| Total number of notes: | 13349 |
Ok, It is time to review another popular CD.
The one I picked this time is the ever avante garde "Three of a perfect pair"
by King Crimson. As most know, King Crimson has been around since 1969 with
a remarkable entry in the British charts of "In the court of the Crimson King".
They have always been (let me coin a phrase) slightly ahead of their time.
Three of a Perfect Pair is to be listened to for the fantastic recording.
It was recorded on analogue multi-track, but as we all know, today's equipment
is quite good over older equipment. Some of the Crimson cult followers will
apreciate the guidance used back in the Larks tounges, and Starless and Bible
Black days. Passgaes (tracks) 5 through 7 are quite awesum. The recording
is so clean, you can even hear the attack of the drum synthesizer oscillator.
The mellotron in the background does some hypnotizing to the listener. Funny,
back in the old days, mellotrons were noisey wow and flutter based string
instruments. (Tapes of actual strings under the keys, when pressed would
produce viola,violin,brass,even pipe organ and choir). Today the mellotron
has been re-engineered to the point that it sounds like a real bleeding
orchestra. This CD brings out that quality. For Crimson trivia freaks, the
last selection on the disk is called Larks tounges in Aspic, Part III. This
is the continuation from parts I and II back in 1973.
No over-emphasising compression or highs or echo can be found. This should be
a standard that all analogue to digital CD's should comply to. Of course this
could be better if ti was digitally done multitrack, but I am amazed on what
E.G. recording engineers have done.
If they had digital CD's back in the early seventies, this group would have
benifited by it. They're older stuff was hissy even when placed on CD. A fine
recording by far, and I recomend it. For those who never have been exposed to
Crimson, beware! It could totally devistate you mind!
Jay McLeman
Note: for Crimson cultist's, E.G. will release later this year all of the
older Crimson recordings on CD. They are supposed to be remastered
digitally. Let's wait and see. Jay
| T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 45.1 | TONTO::ROZMOVITS | Wed Nov 21 1984 09:54 | 31 | ||
I'd like to mention a few of my favorite cd's. My collection is up to 20 or so. In the rock catagory the best cd i've heard by far is Donald Fagen's Nightfly. It was recorded on a 3M 24 track digital machine and is so clean sounding that I couldn't stop playing this one (much to my wife's chagrin) Donald Fagen is perfectionist and a terrific writer. (He was the main force behind Steely Dan). There is absolutly no noise on this album. I tried to hear some but couldn't find any. Sergio Mendes , Sergio Mendes is an analog recording, but right up there among the best I have heard. You can just make out some tape hiss. The recordingis dynamic and well balanced and the music is great. If your not familiar with the music and you like jazz rock brazilian you'll be pleasently surprised. Michael Sembello collaborates on this album. He is the guy who wrote "maniac" from flashdance. The CD as far as I can tell except for surface noise and impulse noise doesn't sound any different than the lp. Paul Simon Hearts and Bones. I had this one on LP first I love the music and bought the CD with the hopes that the compressed sound on the LP would go away on the CD. Well it didn't and the CD sounds compressed too. Its too bad the masters aren't redone for the CD media. With carefull listening one can here hiss under some of the tracks following the average level of that track. I think that is the characteristic of the DBX units they use. In the classical catagory everything I've heard on Telarc so far is tremendous. I personnaly would recommend Stravinsky's Rite of spring, and The Firebird on Telarc. Also in Baroque Telarc's Four Seasons. On Phillips The Brandenburgs (1-3) and (4-6) two records. Thats it for now. Bernie Rozmovits | |||||
| 45.2 | Some short reviews... | COOKIE::ROLLOW | Formerly csc32::unix | Sun Aug 17 1986 19:46 | 35 |
Some short reviews...
Electric Light Orchestra - A New World Record, Jet, ZK-35529
If you liked the record wait till you hear the CD! The bass
on "Tightrope" ("This side", track 1) sounds the way it is
supposed to sound.
Tchaikovsky, Piano Concerto #1
Prokofiev, Piano Concerto #3, Telarc, CD-80124
Good performance and Telarc's usual high quality production.
King Crimson, Lark's Tongues in Aspic, EG records, EGCD 7(?)
Excellent Music. The soft parts sound very good, but
some of louder sections have some distorsion which sounds
like part of the original recording.
Bernard Herrmann, The Ghost and Mrs. Muir (soundtrack), Varese
Sarabande, VCD 47254
Thirty eight minutes of music taken from the original motion
picture score. If you collect soundtracks, I recommend it.
Bill Conti, "The Right Stuff" and "North and South", Varese Sarabande
VCD 47250
A digital recording of material from the original scores.
Another nice addition for those that collect soundtracks.
Enjoy,
Alan
| |||||