Best sound quality of a 70s prog album? |
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Posted: February 25 2005 at 07:30 | ||
Karnevil9 wrote: The great thing about early recording is what the boys used as effects,like what you mentioned Cluster with the cash till effect...All this type of stuff that Floyd were masters at by the way,put no signature on the sound quality at all.Later productions were dosed with effects units & being multi tracked to death,resulting in a very norrow sound stage compared to early recordings..Who gives a stuff about crystal clear CD type sound production...We want natural full width analogue sound as it was intended in those days & sound far superior to me
You listern carefully to say ELP's first album on vinyl..you'll notice more space around instruments,drums are more forward,you can heare every nuance in Gregs voice,it's a big sound...Compare this to 'Brain salad surgery' the recording is no where near as good vastly compressed beyond belief...That advancement in recording & multi tracking for you.. Not! & that was only '73...after all it was a very advanced album for the time. 70's Sound wrote:
so that's were my twin ended up in the U.S! I ain't gonna make no enemy from you...Your so right. I started building a 70's analogue studio some time back but never got finished,most of my gears boxed up after a recent move...Trying to fully kit out a studio '70's styli did as you point out get a bit complicated buying good outboard analogue outboard gear. I also have a problem with Japanese products too but that's another story.. I totally detest anything digital.It sucks & always will.It's a medium of convenience both for the user & production team.. Completely destroys old & new music out right.
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oliverstoned
Special Collaborator Honorary Collaborator Joined: March 26 2004 Location: France Status: Offline Points: 6308 |
Posted: February 25 2005 at 07:53 | ||
"I totally detest anything digital.It sucks & always will.It's a medium of convenience both for the user & production team.."
"Completely destroys old & new music out right." i totally agree with you that's why i put my cd on k7 to soften the numeric's harshness |
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arcer
Prog Reviewer Joined: September 01 2004 Location: United Kingdom Status: Offline Points: 1239 |
Posted: February 25 2005 at 08:27 | ||
Great thread 70s! I'm fascinated by recording techniques etc (the musician in me) but after 20 years of playing (but never enough time in studios) i'm still in the dark about a lot of things. However, Id nominated a few records I think Eddie Offord did amazing things with Yes - check out the quality of the 12 string acoustic guitar at the beginning of And You & I - it has a wonderful bright but natural tone and when Wakeman's mini-moog (I think) drops in it has a fantastic 'liquid' bounce as it pans across the soundstage. The care and attention lavished on something like the mid-section of 'Heart of the Sunrise' is also remarkable, the effects are beautifully presented and the pianos have a great ethereal 'other worldlyness' that just gets me every time. In fact, I think the production on the Yes Album, Fragile and Close to the Edge are about as good as prog production gets - natural, fluid, bouncy, lively and involving with great clarity to all the instruments. Dark Side is an obvious choice - just listen to roto-toms on 'Time' or how controlled the piano is on 'Us and Them' But I'd also like to put a spoke in for 'Animals' - which has a very definite, very considered overall 'sound ethic' - it's spectacularly brittle, the synths are harsh and unrelenting, Gilmour's tones are tough and mixed very 'front of house' and the vocals are beautifully recorded, doesn't appear to be huge amounts of reverb - everything seems to be eq'd simply to be sharp and full yet the whole thing has a wonderful sparseness, the separations are great. Also I've been listening to 'Permanent Waves' a lot the last couple of days - stunning production - Alex's guitar tone on 'Different Strings' is amazing and superbly recorded. Likewise the drums throughout the album have a fantastic dry quality to them. I adore this kind of 70s drum sound. Not too much reverb, but incredibly punchy and controlled. Is it down to the compressors? 'Natural Science' too has some amazing moments. Listen to those first electric guitar parts - this sound, compressed, with a little chorus I think, maybe even DI'd sounds amazing and is a key sound for that period (79-81). You hear it on a lot of records - I'm particularly thinking of a rather obscure single 'Echo Beach' by Martha and the Muffins - great tone. Geddy's vocal is really well recorded here too. I think it's double tracked with a little phase or something similar attached to the second track, sounds great, with a very gentle reverb, beautifully placed in the mix. Top notch. As for the bad - I have to go with some of Genesis' early stuff - just sounds awful, dead basses, lost in the mix, drums like box-tops, cymbals like hubcaps, the keyboards messy and ill-defined in a lot of places, the vocals dipping in and out of the mix with alarming swoops. Just awful We've had a thread on their awfulness somewhere else, with a lot of stuff about the mastering etc. interesting. Keep going.... |
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70sSoundquality
Forum Senior Member Joined: January 18 2005 Location: United States Status: Offline Points: 137 |
Posted: February 25 2005 at 09:33 | ||
I agree with everything stated,
They can get away with having everything so dry, because everything
is initially tracked soooo frickin well! Good old discrete recording
consoles........they dont make em liek they used to.
First, it could be a lot of things, a lot of important desicions
made by the engineers, or neil just bitching and moaning till he gets
his way! What happened here is a natural phenomena called tape
compression, I believe. I'll take those aweful genesis recordings over a great new one. But thats just preference
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70sSoundquality
Forum Senior Member Joined: January 18 2005 Location: United States Status: Offline Points: 137 |
Posted: February 25 2005 at 09:36 | ||
by the way, you want to talk about awful analog recordings?
Okay, heres one I made 1 year ago when I was 17. I play everything, but my friend Jack plays bass. I wrote it. I recorded it on an 80-8, and mixed it down to a Pioneer HR-100 8-track cart, which was moded by yours truly to record at 10 IPS! Very simple mod, but the sound quality leaves much to be desired, as does the song ! Id like to say my more recent efforts are more, resolute. http://webzoom.freewebs.com/octavecat/NotToday.mp3 Have fun! best John |
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Posted: February 25 2005 at 12:27 | ||
I like the sound and production on Relayer the best. Especially the drumming on Sound Chaser--the sound of the tom-toms and the jungle noises. Very real and eerie.
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oliverstoned
Special Collaborator Honorary Collaborator Joined: March 26 2004 Location: France Status: Offline Points: 6308 |
Posted: February 25 2005 at 12:50 | ||
not bad it sounds 70's like! |
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Garion81
Special Collaborator Honorary Collaborator Joined: May 22 2004 Location: So Cal, USA Status: Offline Points: 4338 |
Posted: February 25 2005 at 13:32 | ||
As far as Dark Side and BSS I am not positively sure but were they not recorded to mixed down to 4 channel "quad" before they became stereo mixes? I remember hearing the quad versions of these first and after I had a hard time accepting the stereo mix as two thin and muddy at the same time. On some tracks I agree about anti digital but having just heard the first two
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"What are you going to do when that damn thing rusts?" |
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greenback
Special Collaborator Honorary Collaborator Joined: August 14 2004 Location: Canada Status: Offline Points: 3300 |
Posted: February 25 2005 at 13:39 | ||
happy the man - crafty hands and the first one! camel - i can see your house from here a special mention to Gentle Giant - Interview!
the all-time best recorded prog album: Saga - Heads or tales Honorable mentions: 1 Rush - Power windows 2 Marillion - Fugazi 3 Yes - 90125 |
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[HEADPINS - LINE OF FIRE: THE RECORD HAVING THE MOST POWERFUL GUITAR SOUND IN THE WHOLE HISTORY OF MUSIC!>
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James Lee
Special Collaborator Honorary Collaborator Joined: June 05 2004 Status: Offline Points: 3525 |
Posted: February 25 2005 at 23:59 | ||
My picks are from the Italian prog arena: Metamorfosi's Inferno is about the most poorly-recorded 70s album I've ever heard. Everything is distorted and compressed to hell, and poorly mixed on top of that. I do love listening to it, though...the rich nasty bassy mess really kicks you nicely in the balls sometimes. On the other hand, PFM's "Per Un Amico" may be the best-sounding 70s album I've heard. Plenty of warmth, detail, clarity and punch; not as satisfyingly groin-smashing in the saturation department, but that's not what PFM was about, anyway. |
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Ivan_Melgar_M
Special Collaborator Honorary Collaborator Joined: April 27 2004 Location: Peru Status: Offline Points: 19557 |
Posted: February 26 2005 at 00:25 | ||
Not the only one but the sound of Tales of Mystery and Imagination is absolutely perfect. The mixture of sound effects with Orchestra in The fall of the House of Usher is absolutely beyond their time and the technical advances available in the mid 70's. I listened a lot of sound effects that interfere with the music creating a chaotic effect, but Parsons graduates the volume so carefully that helps to enhance the atmosphere and blends with the orchestra arrangements by Andrew Powell. Iván |
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Hiwatter
Forum Senior Member Joined: March 26 2005 Location: Slovakia Status: Offline Points: 137 |
Posted: March 26 2005 at 11:58 | ||
Pulsar - "Halloween" -- great 3D sound
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Hiwatter
Forum Senior Member Joined: March 26 2005 Location: Slovakia Status: Offline Points: 137 |
Posted: March 26 2005 at 12:06 | ||
I agree with one thing not. The Fenders and Gibson guitars in 70s were in the worse era and have overall worst reputation. Both brands were owned by big corporations (CBS and Norlin) and the quality went downhill from late 60s. The best Fender and Gibson guitars are from 50s and 60s and now from Custom Shop. I had some 70s Fenders, and overall some were really far worse than nowadays reissues. (they were heavy, dead sounding with thick finishes, bad neck pockets etc.) Their only advantages are the price: for example 1977 Stratocaster is available for 1200$. 1967 Strat in good condition for 5000$, 1957 for 25000$. With Gibsons it is the same. |
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plodder
Forum Senior Member Joined: December 19 2004 Status: Offline Points: 255 |
Posted: March 26 2005 at 13:07 | ||
I was never that bothered in the production etc.
What I liked was the witty things scratched into the lead-out space. I always looked for them. Edited by plodder |
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firth_of_Fifth
Forum Senior Member Joined: March 26 2005 Status: Offline Points: 192 |
Posted: March 26 2005 at 13:24 | ||
Best sound quality to me is 'In a glass house' By Gentle Giant.
Followed by Hemispheres Thing is it's hard for me to decide because I can't listen to most modern music as the production is sickening. As someone previously mentioned, The thinness/Sparsness of the recordings add alot, It allows the music to breath. |
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Ben2112
Forum Senior Member Joined: March 15 2005 Status: Offline Points: 870 |
Posted: March 26 2005 at 13:26 | ||
Listening to GG's The Power And The Glory right now for the first time and it seems like an excellent sound for 1974, especially the drums. That's usually the biggest thing that drags down the production quality of old albums---when you can barely hear the snare & cymbals, not to mention the bass drum giving a feeble thump. Just imagine how much better some old GG & Genesis albums would sound with clear, dynamic drum sounds (not the 80's gated snare sound; blech I hate that!). Larks' Tongues and Red have remarkable drum sounds for their time too; listen to "One More Red Nightmare" at full volume and bask in air-drum heaven.
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Yams
Forum Senior Member Joined: December 16 2004 Status: Offline Points: 198 |
Posted: March 26 2005 at 14:48 | ||
Isn't that one of the worst Pink Floyd recordings since it was produced at their newly built Britannia Row Studios? I know it doesn't compare to their Abbey Road recordings. Anyway, Dark Side was the recording used to measure production value on many other recordings until the digital revolution. The Wall is also a perfect recording. I've enjoyed Selling England By The Pound as well. |
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topographic2112
Forum Senior Member Joined: March 23 2005 Location: United States Status: Offline Points: 99 |
Posted: March 26 2005 at 16:32 | ||
UK - 1978 Alan Parsons Project - Tales Of Mystery And Imagination - 1976 (these first two sound like they came from the 80's instead of the 70's. Way ahead of their times!) Rush - A Farewell To Kings - 1977 ELP - Brain Salad Surgery - 1973 King Crimson - Larks' Tongues In Aspic - 1973 Pink Floyd - Dark Side Of The Moon - 1973 Pink Floyd - Animals - 1977
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"Rock is the medium of our generation." - Yes - "Release, Release"
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70sSoundquality
Forum Senior Member Joined: January 18 2005 Location: United States Status: Offline Points: 137 |
Posted: March 28 2005 at 04:56 | ||
I agree
with one thing not. The Fenders and Gibson guitars in 70s were in the
worse era and have overall worst reputation. Both brands were owned by
big corporations (CBS and Norlin) and the quality went downhill
from late 60s. The best Fender and Gibson guitars are from 50s and 60s
and now from Custom Shop. I had some 70s Fenders, and overall some were
really far worse than nowadays reissues. (they were heavy, dead
sounding with thick finishes, bad neck pockets etc.) Their only
advantages are the price: for example 1977 Stratocaster is available
for 1200$. 1967 Strat in good condition for 5000$, 1957 for
25000$. With Gibsons it is the same.
Ive heard this argument before, and one thing you cant do is believe reputation. It comes from many people who have closed minds usually and, typically, people who associate themselves with modern music arent necesarrily vouching for the older instruments. The argument that the quality went down after the late 60s is a complete lie, not to call you a liar, but the fact is the worse strats were actually built right after CBS purchased the company (1965). Speaking from experience much like yourself, I can attest that the older ones are far better for me. First of all, I've played a 1972 (? not sure on RI date) reissue Jazz bass, from the custom shop. I have an actual 1978 jazz bass along with a 1974 jazz bass fitted with a 1972 p bass neck. Comparing my original 70's basses to that re-issue was pretty much a joke. The thud, the balls, and guts were clearly missing. I also keep a 1972 Gibson Les paul deluxe along with a 1973 EB-3 gibson bass, and comparing them to the new ones is just wrong. to each its own! best, |
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70sSoundquality
Forum Senior Member Joined: January 18 2005 Location: United States Status: Offline Points: 137 |
Posted: March 28 2005 at 05:03 | ||
Let yer ears decide! Saying it could be the worst "since it was produced at their newly built Britannia Row studios" is like saying Relayer is the worst Yes album, since it was only recorded in Chris Squire's garage. The gear is good, regardless of how immature the studio is. They had money for the best equipment, and the best engineers. Animals is clearly a winner...maybe note as spacey as dark side, but FAR superior in fidelity and noise floor. Listen to the quiet parts in Sheep...let your ears decide....but really listen. Those are real instruments, sometimes sounding like the equivalent of a cartoon drawing to a photograph. Absolutely mind blowing stuff |
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