Originally posted by pastoralguy
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As regards Dave's query about cutting masters - the whole release system started with the production team and the artist/s agreeing on which takes to use. The listening was often at the studios from the master tapes [or a copy of it] but occasionally from test acetates cut locally and played on in house turntables and pickups. Decca would use their own cartridge and arm typically with a Garrard 301/401 turntable [back in the 50/60 era anyway]. The ears of the production and engineering teams - the cutting engineer particularly - would have a good idea what needed doing in the way of levels and EQ at the cutting/mastering stage so that the discs came out of ther pressing plant with the required sound - but only insofar that the domestic playing devices would be similar to their own. If your domestic playback system was radically different from theirs then there could be a discrepancy in sound quality and so your home listening might well prefer one style eg Decca over another eg EMI or whoever. There are stories of major artists approving records for release only to be horrified when they heard their own records at home!
Decca were well known for hitting tape rather harder than EMI which tended to brighten the sound.
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