I'm currently listening to the end of Mahler's 8th acquired this morning as a free mp3 download - Utah Symphony Orchestra conducted by Maurice Abravanel.
I notice it's also available on YouTube - see https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=agd6lSR88t0
I don't know when it was recorded - I'm trying to find out. My initial point in writing this was to comment on the very disappointing sound quality. Then I got drawn into the music, and even despite what I feel is miserable sound quality the end is terrific.
Nevertheless my point was going to be that surely many of these older recordings - reissued as MP3s or other formats - were very much better in their LP incarnations. Some older recordings have - I believe been remastered splendidly - but others are just tossed onto MP3s and robbed of all frequencies which make them worth listening to, and perhaps more to the point - the dynamics are completely screwed up.
Am I imagining this? This is a sample of one - recording - and now I'm listening again to the YouTube version.
Did this particular one predate versions by Solti, Kubelik or Wyn Morris? If so, then perhaps one might expect it to be less effective - but otherwise there does not seem to be any reason why recordings such as this should not be reissued in very much better sound quality.
I am just choosing this one as it's what I'm listening to right now - but the impact - for example of the organ entry at 1 hour 12:55 (Youtube version) is completely lost. I can remember having played this (vinyl) on LPs [though not this particular recording]and having the house shake - or at least having significant impact. I think that many other older recorded performance are not served well by whatever is done to them to make them available for distribution now.
So are older recordings really that bad (which I don't really think) - or are they just being put out in mediocre "re-masterings" as part of commercial churn - by an industry which doesn't seem to really care about sound quality for material which may be less financially worthwhile for those with the copyrights to publish them.
I notice it's also available on YouTube - see https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=agd6lSR88t0
I don't know when it was recorded - I'm trying to find out. My initial point in writing this was to comment on the very disappointing sound quality. Then I got drawn into the music, and even despite what I feel is miserable sound quality the end is terrific.
Nevertheless my point was going to be that surely many of these older recordings - reissued as MP3s or other formats - were very much better in their LP incarnations. Some older recordings have - I believe been remastered splendidly - but others are just tossed onto MP3s and robbed of all frequencies which make them worth listening to, and perhaps more to the point - the dynamics are completely screwed up.
Am I imagining this? This is a sample of one - recording - and now I'm listening again to the YouTube version.
Did this particular one predate versions by Solti, Kubelik or Wyn Morris? If so, then perhaps one might expect it to be less effective - but otherwise there does not seem to be any reason why recordings such as this should not be reissued in very much better sound quality.
I am just choosing this one as it's what I'm listening to right now - but the impact - for example of the organ entry at 1 hour 12:55 (Youtube version) is completely lost. I can remember having played this (vinyl) on LPs [though not this particular recording]and having the house shake - or at least having significant impact. I think that many other older recorded performance are not served well by whatever is done to them to make them available for distribution now.
So are older recordings really that bad (which I don't really think) - or are they just being put out in mediocre "re-masterings" as part of commercial churn - by an industry which doesn't seem to really care about sound quality for material which may be less financially worthwhile for those with the copyrights to publish them.
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