This page serves to review the releases I've gotten from them so far, in a manner similar to my Rock Remaster Reviews. Currently I have reviews available for Zounds releases from the following artists:
The problems with the early Allman Brothers recordings are numerous and typical. They sound dead and lifeless, like someone made a crummy cassette recording of the band that they just copied onto CD. All of the remastered tracks sound much more forward, alive, and dynamic. They still sound like early recordings, though. Take Whipping Post; on the original, the drums sound very indistinct, and that isn't totally fixed on the new version. By the time you get to material like Don't Keep Me Wondering, there's actually some decent treble extension to the recordings off Beginnings, but when you listen to the remaster it blows the old one away in that department. The fact that the recording was better made shows through on both versions, but it's obvious that it's actually very good on an absolute scale when listening to the Zounds release. No, it's never perfect, though. When listening to Midnight Rider, the vocals still sound muddled together, even though the guitar is hugely improved (and you can really hear the bongos now).
The quality of the Filmore East recordings are much better. There's really not much of an improvement for those tracks. They are a bit more detailed, and the bass guitar has less of a one-note quality to it. But these are minor differences, not the night and day comparison you get when Zounds works over the other early stuff.
For Allman fans looking for better versions of these
recordings, Zounds is a
viable route. I'm not so sure I'm totally content with the
track line-up on this
collection myself, but I'm not enough of a scholar on the
band's history to
really grade it too much on that scale. Collectors of their
work will certainly
want a copy, even if it isn't necessarily the best
collection out there for casual
fans like myself.
One thing that I've learned about crummy sound quality on CD
is that you
can't always go blaming the band for it; there are so many
places the record
company can screw the master tape's sound up before it gets
to you that it's a
wonder that anything is listenable. This collection from
Zounds is the first
chance I've ever had to see which of the problems with the
BOC sound quality
were attributable to poor original quality and which result
from crummy
mastering. The Oyster Boys come out looking pretty damn
good after all.
Let's go back to the beginning. If you listen to Cities
On Flame With
Rock'n'Roll off their first album in the late 60's, the
recording is obviously
a dud. It sound extremely closed in and undynamic. There's
almost no top-
end, and all the bass sounds like generic thuds instead of
instruments. That
album is the one in my collection most likely to get
processed when I play it;
I'm often known to drag out the old dbx dynamic range
expander just so I
make it sound better. Let me tell you, there's not need for
any processing on
the remastered version. Sure, on an absolute scale, it's a
touch undynamic,
but what do you expect from a recording this old. It's miles
better, though,
and all the instruments are finally there. The cymbals
sound incredible,
better than I thought I'd ever hear them. And the guitars
are huge, just like
I'd always figured they should sound. I am seriously
thinking that I need to
track these guys at Zounds down, take them hostage, and
force them to remaster
the entire first album, if this song is representative of
what they could do
with it.
OK, now onto the obligatory BOC trio. Any time you see the
band play, they
have to play all three of their big hits just to keep the
casual fans happy. You
have to expect that you'll find all of them on any greatest
hits collection, and
this one is no disappointment. The first from the sacred
three is Don't
Fear The Reaper. By 1976, the sound quality had become
decent, but
there is still plenty of room for improvement. The drums
sound a bit dead
and the soundstage is too small. The new version solves
those problems,
along with making the bass guitar far more solid and giving
overall better
dynamics. You can hear all of the reverb on the main guitar
lines that drive
the song forward now, which adds a lot to how alive
everything sounds.
1977's Godzilla is from the first album by the band
that I'm at least
content with the sound quality of; sure, it's no real
winner, but at least the
huge bass guitar that many of the songs revolve around is
good. The
remastered release does add a bit, especially (again) to the
guitar reverb.
Sure, the drums are better, but by this album the original
one was at least
decent.
Moving along to 1981's Burnin' For You, we find what
I think is the
band's best recorded sound from the regular albums. There's
a slick, smooth
studio sound that is hard to fault. Zounds does improve it
some. There's less
compression on all the drum work, with the cymbals
throughout the song
being much more alive. There's also more separation between
the guitars
that are on the left and right sides, which makes the whole
soundstage
bigger. Now that we're done talking about the popular
stuff, I'll mention the
tracks from my personal BOC pet peeve. I Am the One You
Warned Me Of, on the original Columbia release, sounds
like it is coming
from far away when you listen. It's like the band is a foot
or two behind
where I usually hear things playing from out of my system.
And there are
obnoxious sibilants that are ear piercing on a system prone
to exaggerating
them (which most lo-fi setups are, this used to drive me
crazy before my
last round of upgrading). Well, after going through the
German
audiophile treatment, the harshness is reduced a bit. And
the band is moved
back into the room again, a welcome improvement. I plan on
getting this
entire album remastered when I go take over Zounds, too.
So what do we have here? The best recorded Blue Oyster Cult
sound there is,
no question in my mind. It will give you new respect for
the band's
competence in the recording studio. I'm not 100% happy with
the tracks
selected; I could do without the live songs like R. U.
Ready to Rock
and the We Gotta Get Out Of This Place cover. I'd
much prefer, say, a
remastered Flaming Telepaths. But for now, I have to
take what I
can get, and I'm pretty happy with that. If you want
something by this band,
this is the collection to get; all the domestic hits
collections are wimpy
in comparison.
What's this? A greatest hits collection? And a foreign one
at that, if you can excuse the pun. Foreigner is
one of those bands that I've never quite liked enough to go
buying all their albums. Sure, some of the better ones
(like Double Vision) are good all the way through,
but I honestly don't want everything they've ever done. A
good collection of their popular work is sufficient. The
problem has been that all the US collections that have come
out are woefully incomplete. There are at least 9 Foreigner
tracks that I find
essential, and none of the domestic greatest hits
collections (and there have been a number of them) quite
hit all of them. I've been listening to the Records
compilation for years now (it was one of the first
CDs I ever got), and while it's almost complete the sound
quality is woefully inadequate (this is true of
almost all of the early CDs I got).
This release, from the Phono Music Zounds label (a part of
Time-Warner), is the collection I've been
waiting for. 16 tracks, running over 65 minutes, including
all the songs from the band I've ever wanted.
Here's a quick track listing (since this information is
always difficult to find for imports):
Feels like the first time, Cold as ice, Starrider, Hot
blooded, Blue Morning Blue Day, Double Vision,
Dirty White Boy, Women, Head Games, Juke Box Hero, Waiting
for a girl like you, Urgent, That was
yesterday, I want to know what love is, Say you will, I
don't want to live without you
Yep, that's just about all the good ones. I personally
would have left out Women and used Long
long way from home myself, but this one is damn close to
perfect as far as the track listing goes. And
they have it laid out in my favorite order for collections--
by release date, so you can listen to the band
change over time in a nice organized fashion. But what
about the sound quality? Zounds claims to aim at
the "audiophile" market, which is a marketing claim I'm
always suspicious of myself.
Their advertising may seem a bit pretentious, but they
deliver the goods (Delivering the goods is a
cool Judas Priest song, which is another band I much prefer
to sample only in greatest hits collection size
bites). When I first put on this collection, it opened with
Feels like the first time. Now, as one of
the songs I've been living with for close to a decade on the
Records collection, I've heard this song
hundreds of times. The version on this German remaster was
so incredibly improved that I barely
recognized it! All the instruments sound so monstrously
different because of the huge fidelity increase that
it almost sounds like a different recording.
The original Records collection rolled off all the
highs to keep the noise down. This newer release
doesn't do it's damage in that fashion. There is a
"NoNOISE" processed used on about half the tracks (I
can't tell you more about it because all the descriptions
are in German). On early tracks like Cold as
Ice, the boring treble and uninteresting drum work is
replaced by a very engaging sound that not only
shows off all the drums from top to bottom, it makes for a
much cleaner guitar and very improved vocals;
Lou Gramm's voice has a realism and presence that is nowhere
to be found on the earlier collection. This is
typical of every song here. Songs like Head Games
sound like they are being played back on a
cheap boombox on any system when I listen to my earlier
version; the Zounds release brings them back to
life, with a world of things you can't even hear before
suddenly come forward. I feel the tracks that weren't
processed with NoNOISE sound a bit more alive then the ones
that weren't, but I can't blame that on the
processing--it's probably the fact that the originals were
of worse quality in the first place that got that
process used to scrub them up. The noise level on every
track is very low compared with the huge dynamic
sound. I'm not one to normally get wrapped up with imaging
and soundstaging, but there's a night and day
difference in that area on every track as well. Even later
material, like tracks from 1987's Inside
Information (which I always thought was well recorded)
like Say You Will are far more
dynamic and alive. It's not just the older material that is
much improved.
I'm sure you're already gotten the impression that going on
with a track-by-track review is sort of silly here.
This German release creams any domestic Foreigner release
I've ever heard; I don't know how it compares
with the recently remastered versions of some of their
albums that have been trickling out, but I can't
imagine them being significantly better then the Zounds
version. With it's terrific collection of tracks, it's
all the Foreigner many people would ever want, and the sound
quality really does deserve the "audiophile"
label. It's every bit as good as the best American
remastered material I've heard. If you're only going to buy
one CD of material from this band, this is the one to get.
I've got a wide range of reactions to remastered recordings.
At the bottom is
the "I can't believe they screwed that up!" feeling (check
out the recent
Journey remaster series if you want to hear some that I
prefer the originals
of). Usually things that were already well recorded get a
"gee, it's nice that
they improved that a bit". Typical 70's rock fare receives
"wow, that sounds
better"; that's where the majority of the stuff from the
Zounds catalog shows
up. Now, the first track on both the moldy old Kansas
collection I have and
the shiny new collection under consideration here is
Carry On My
Wayward Son. This staple of classic rock radio is a
song I've heard
hundreds of times, everywhere from in my system to bouncing
along in the
car. I put the remastered Kansas in the player in my usual
system and
started it up. This got the highest reaction on the
remaster scale, the "holy
shit, did they record this again?" comment that gets me
running back to my
old copy in disbelief that it could be that improved. Sure
enough, there really
is that big of a difference. That whole vocal introduction?
It's no longer a
nice chorus of voices singing in aggregate harmony; you can
pick out every
singer, what they're doing, and where they are standing (or
where the
recording engineer put them at, as the case may be). When
the kick drum
starts going, instead of a nice round bass thump it jams you
in the gut with
the impact. And the guitars, they wail away like I've never
heard them
before. You can even hear some of the odd studio pans and
such that give
clues as to how they put the song together. It's
phenomenal, and it elevates
the experience of listening to that song above the high peak
it was already
sitting at. You wanna talk value for your dollar? I'd pay
the $25 this
collection cost me for a single of this song if that's what
I had to do to get one,
now that I know it exists. Worth every penny; there is no
way I could even
think of getting this kind of enhancement to my listening
experience by
putting that money into my system instead of the music.
OK, let's calm down a bit here. There isn't the same sort
of incredible
improvement on the rest of the songs here. Point of Know
Return
gives you a better resolution of the interplay between the
stringed
instrument (what is it I'm supposed to describe that
instrument Kansas uses
as, is it an electric violin?) and the keyboard line. The
harmony vocals are
more clear and there's considerably more sparkle to the
cymbals. Fight
Fire With Fire tightens up the bass a bit, and the
slight harshness that
I've always heard in the chorus is gone. Dust in the
Wind gives you
more atmosphere, it sounds more like a real event than a
recording. Song
for America is really strange; the bass guitar line
actually sounds less
prominent, and deeper instead, like there was some sort of
bloated boost
going on in the original mastering that isn't there anymore.
Play the
Game Tonight is the best recorded original that there's
a remastered
version for comparison, and it's the least changed. It's
just as noisy in the
quiet parts. There is more echo in the vocals, and along
with increased
dynamics the cymbals are more pronounced.
What do I think overall? I'm planning on making my own
hybrid, mixing the
remastered tracks in with older copies of the others (I'm
unimpressed by any
of the other material that shows up in the Zounds collection
that I didn't
already have). That's the only way I see to get my own more
perfect version
of the tracks I want to hear. While the German collection
doesn't replace the
domestic hits CD for me, it's certainly a very much welcome
supplement that
makes me enjoy some of the tracks even more than I used to.
It's appropriate to look at the albums in order to follow
some of the
convolutions that the catalog goes through just to get the
right background to
evaluate the new recordings by. 1976's Tales of Mystery
and
Imagination has a long remastering trail behind it.
When it was first
released on CD in 1986, Parsons didn't just ship the master
tape out. No, he
did a complicated remastering himself, actually going back
to earlier versions
of the tapes when possible and digitizing everything. There
were even some
new parts added. The whole thing is actually different in
ways that go above
and beyond sound quality changes. That's the original
version that came out
on CD, and it really sounds great. A few years back, Mobile
Fidelity kicked
off their Ultradisc II with GAIN by including ToMaI
in the initial
batch of releases. They actually went back to the original
1976 recording and
released a spectacular version of that one. It's a
fantastic remastering. I
have no hesitation is recommending either of these two
versions of the
recording as some of the best sounding rock music available.
Moving forward to the second album, Mobile Fidelity released
a remastered
I, Robot as one of their first CD Original Master
Recordings many years ago.
That aluminum disc did sound better (this was before the
whole gold CD craze),
with the biggest difference being improved dynamic range.
But their
equipment from that time period doesn't even approach what
they get out of
things with their newer Ultradisc releases, and while it's
improved you’re
obviously not getting everything there is to have out of
that recording (after
all, you'd expect it to sound at least as good as the
previous album, and it's
not even close).
In the last few years, Arista Japan took a shot at
rereleasing the whole
catalog. The Japanese remasters were decent in spots, but
overall I wasn't
very impressed. In general, while I did like the
improvement in detail and bass, I
found them to be far too harsh, especially the later
recordings (Eye in the
Sky, Vulture Culture, Ammonia Avenue). Alan's
recordings are
not in your face like that.
This brings us to today, with me listening to the APP
collection from Zounds.
The 18 tracks are a complicated study in remastering. First
off, the easy
ones to describe. Doctor Tarr and Professor Fether
and The
Raven appear to be the versions released on the 1986
ToMaI, and
I didn't hear any noticeable difference between them and my
original CD.
Urbania and Too Late are off of 1985's
Stereotomy and
1987's Gaudi respectively, the last two official
Project albums. By
that time, Alan obviously had full control over the whole
digital chain from
him to the listener, with everything sounding just as good
as the early analog
work. Those two songs don't sound significantly different
from the original
CD versions, either (I suspect that they are in fact the
same digital bits,
although I need to do some more extensive tests before I'd
say that for sure).
This leaves with two time periods left to cover. The songs
from 1977's I,
Robot are the most improved on the album. I have been
trying to get a
really high-fidelity version of I Wouldn't Want To Be
Like You for
close to fifteen years now, and this is the first copy of
that recording that
made it to me with enough of the master tape intact that I'm
really satisfied.
You can finally hear the cymbals just forward enough,
without being harsh,
and the bass is much more solid than any previous release.
Hearing every
detail to Ian Bairnson's guitar like I've never experienced
before make this
song an even more sublime 3 minutes and 21 seconds. Getting
The
Voice remastered has made Steve Harley's vocal sound
even more
paranoid and haunted, as it should. Even though I've heard
it hundreds of
times before, the robotic "he's gonna get you" actually got
my skin to crawl
the first time I heard it here; that out-of-phase effect was
rendered so much
better that it really spooked me to hear it like that.
The tracks on the collection from the other early albums
Pyramid,
Eve, and Turn of a Friendly Card all have
similar
improvements. The instruments sound more realistic, and
there's an
enhanced sense of the space to the recording that makes it
sound less like a
recording and more like an actual event happening in front
of you. Compared
with the original CD releases, the main obvious difference
is that the treble is
less rolled-off.
Next up are the early digital works from Eye in the
Sky, Vulture
Culture, and Ammonia Avenue. I've always thought
these were
the weakest three albums in the APP catalog from a sound
quality
perspective. The lush analog sound that goes with the
earlier material is
gone (the drums in particular seem abrupt), partly because
the technology at
the time didn't really make for a particularly good digital
recording. Parts of
Vulture Culture in particular scream of early digital
harshness in
every incarnation I've heard (the evil Sony 1610 digital
system mentioned in
the liner notes is not a piece of equipment you'd recommend
by modern
standards). The Zounds versions of these songs are a bit
better. Eye in
the Sky and Mammagamma are just a bit more
detailed and
exciting to hear. Prime Time and Don't Answer
Me are slightly
improved all around. Days are Numbers gets a bit of
the edge taken
off the sibilants compared with the old CD version, much to
my relief (on the
Japanese remastered release of this song, hearing "watch the
Stars/...See so
far/Someday..." from the chorus is enough to drive me out of
the room, the
treble is so exaggerated). Nothing spectacular on any of
these, but the
difference is nice and it makes these the best recorded
versions of these songs
I've ever found.
Let's count the totals. Four songs that don't really sound
any different, nine
early recordings that get your typical analog remastering
improvement, and
five early digital works that make it from the studio to us
in slightly better
condition than any previous release. Is it worth buying?
That's a value
judgment for you to make. There are few improvements here
dramatic
enough that I'd say this is a must-have, and it's not
necessarily the best
collection of songs out there for casual fans (you could go
buy both of their
domestic greatest hits collections for about the same amount
and get 23
songs instead of the 18 here, albeit with recordings that
aren't quite as good).
For those of us at the intersection of audiophile obsession
and Project
fanaticism, though, this is an opportunity to get a better
focused look into the
studio sound behind this band than we've ever had before.
Blue Oyster Cult: The Reaper (Best)
I'm sure that when you think about high-fidelity rock
recordings, Blue Oyster
Cult is the first band that comes to mind. OK, maybe not.
Truth is, BOC has
some of the worst sounding recordings available on compact
disc today. All
their recordings before 1977 are hugely compressed in
dynamic range. And
even technology doesn't save them; 1988's Imaginos
sounds like
somebody cranked up the treble knob before mastering the
silly thing.
Foreigner: Juke Box Hero (Best of)
1994, Zounds (original 1977-1987, Atlantic)
Golden Earring: Radar Love (Best)
I find the domestic Continuing story of Radar Love
greatest hits by this band to be excellent, both in
selection and
sound quality. The German collection does improve the sound
a bit, with a more open soundstage and
cleaner deep bass. I'm not especially happy with the tracks
on that one (come on, they have a 19 minutes
long cover of Eight Miles High instead of including
classic hits like Twilight Zone), but the
sound doesn't dissapoint on what they do have.
Kansas: Dust in the Wind (Best)
One of the first CDs I ever bought was the collection
appropriately titled
The Best of Kansas. To my mind, this is the
consummate greatest
hits collection. Ten tracks, no fluff; every song's a
winner. And there's
nothing I really like by the band they left off. It's all
the Kansas I thought I'd
ever own. Then those damn German remastering guys got
involved, and I
started to have doubts. Sure, the sound quality on the old
collection is
decent; above average for typical rock music from the
period, but certainly no
reference recording. When I found it in the Kansas bin at
my local store, I
had to have it, just to see what else I could get out of the
band's music. After
all, six out of those ten tracks show up in remastered form
(along with a live
version of a 7th, The Wall).
The Alan Parsons Project: Prime Time (Best)
Me and Alan Parsons Project albums go way back. It's no
exaggeration to
say that my initial foray into high-end audio was primarily
motivated by a
desire to milk more out of their albums, particularly I,
Robot. Parsons
is always at or near the cutting edge of recording
technology, and his work
from the mid 70's is still top-notch even by today's
standards. The only real
problem is most of the Project albums came out fairly early
in the cycle of CD
releases, and accordingly were done with early mastering
equipment. While
it's not a dire need, the back catalog could use a
freshening with more modern
A/D conversion.
Copyright 1996, 1997 by Gregory Smith. All rights
reserved. While links to this page are quite welcome,
reprinting the reviews without my permission is not allowed.
Some of this material originally appeared as articles in SoundStage!.
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