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Thread started 07/17/12 12:11pm

ElectricSugar

Are the Dirty Mind/Controversy/1999 vinyl remasters worth buying?

Recently I decided to buy myself a record player. I heard people on the org say that Prince albums sound far better on vinyl than on CD; never being exposed to analogue music, I thought I'd buy a record player and find out for myself (very, very true I might add).

Anyways, in the past couple of months I've been building my Prince vinyl collection. So far I only have PR through to SOTT (where better to start than the ESSENTIALS, right?).

So have any of you chaps bought the Dirty Mind/1999/Controversy Remasters that were released a while back? If so, I'd love some feedback; wanna know if they're worth buying. People have told me that original vinyl pressings sound better than remasters... is this true?

Thnx

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Reply #1 posted 07/17/12 12:34pm

thedance

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ElectricSugar said:

So have any of you chaps bought the Dirty Mind/1999/Controversy Remasters that were released a while back? If so, I'd love some feedback; wanna know if they're worth buying.

People have told me that original vinyl pressings sound better than remasters... is this true?

Thnx

^

I like these vinyls, cool

to me the new editions sound as good as the originals. (I guess it is a little heard to find the originals without a single scratch, or any noice at all these days?)...

therfor I think it is a good buy.

Btw Purple Rain is out on heavy weight 180 grams vinyl too.

[img:$uid]http://img256.imageshack.us/img256/1896/vinyls20101.jpg[/img:$uid]

Prince 4Ever. heart
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Reply #2 posted 07/17/12 12:39pm

thedance

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Off topic, sorry...

(I don't mean to hijack your thread/ subject)..

but I also have these - a little more rare vinyl LP's:

[img:$uid]http://img641.imageshack.us/img641/3277/vinyls.jpg[/img:$uid]

Prince 4Ever. heart
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Reply #3 posted 07/17/12 12:39pm

nyse

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yes go for it, I have the dirty mind and 1999 vinyl emasters and they sound great !

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Reply #4 posted 07/17/12 12:41pm

ElectricSugar

Didn't know PR was remastered... that should be great to listen to! My PR vinyl was bought for 50p in a clearance bin! It works fine but the sound is very grainy, the record's not in good condition at all!

What's the PR remaster like?

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Reply #5 posted 07/17/12 12:44pm

ElectricSugar

thedance said:

Off topic, sorry...

(I don't mean to hijack your thread/ subject)..

but I also have these - a little more rare vinyl LP's:

[img:$uid]http://img641.imageshack.us/img641/3277/vinyls.jpg[/img:$uid]

Holy Shit! I'd KILL to hear The Rainbow Children on vinyl!

Have you heard Lotusflow3r on vinyl, I'm thinking of getting that next.

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Reply #6 posted 07/17/12 1:21pm

Genesia

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Okay, just for the record...these are reissues - not remasters.

They don't sound any different than the original vinyl (trust me, I have both issues of Purple Rain) - they are just heavier-weight vinyl.

We don’t mourn artists because we knew them. We mourn them because they helped us know ourselves.
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Reply #7 posted 07/17/12 1:27pm

tritoncin

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ElectricSugar said:

thedance said:

Off topic, sorry...

(I don't mean to hijack your thread/ subject)..

but I also have these - a little more rare vinyl LP's:

[img:$uid]http://img641.imageshack.us/img641/3277/vinyls.jpg[/img:$uid]

Holy Shit! I'd KILL to hear The Rainbow Children on vinyl!

Have you heard Lotusflow3r on vinyl, I'm thinking of getting that next.

OMG!! TGE on VINYL!! P should reissue this one.

"America is a continent..."
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Reply #8 posted 07/17/12 1:29pm

tritoncin

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double post, sorry

[Edited 7/17/12 13:29pm]

"America is a continent..."
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Reply #9 posted 07/17/12 2:19pm

electricberet

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Genesia said:

Okay, just for the record...these are reissues - not remasters.



They don't sound any different than the original vinyl (trust me, I have both issues of Purple Rain) - they are just heavier-weight vinyl.



Dirty Mind, Controversy, and 1999 were remastered by Bernie Grundman for these reissues. That was confirmed to me in an email from an assistant at his studio. You can also confirm it yourself by checking the writing in the deadwax and comparing it to the originals. They were not remixed, however.

As to the sound quality, that is subjective but I think at least the reissue of Dirty Mind sounds better than my original vinyl pressing.

See here:

http://prince.org/msg/7/357631

And here:

http://www.stevehoffman.t...p?t=243637
The Census Bureau estimates that there are 2,518 American Indians and Alaska Natives currently living in the city of Long Beach.
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Reply #10 posted 07/17/12 2:24pm

Genesia

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electricberet said:

Genesia said:

Okay, just for the record...these are reissues - not remasters.

They don't sound any different than the original vinyl (trust me, I have both issues of Purple Rain) - they are just heavier-weight vinyl.

Dirty Mind, Controversy, and 1999 were remastered by Bernie Grundman for these reissues. That was confirmed to me in an email from an assistant at his studio. You can also confirm it yourself by checking the writing in the deadwax and comparing it to the originals. They were not remixed, however. As to the sound quality, that is subjective but I think at least the reissue of Dirty Mind sounds better than my original vinyl pressing. See here: http://prince.org/msg/7/357631 And here: http://www.stevehoffman.t...p?t=243637

I stand corrected - thanks.

Odd that they can re-master the vinyl albums, but they do nothing about the awful CD mastering, isn't it?

We don’t mourn artists because we knew them. We mourn them because they helped us know ourselves.
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Reply #11 posted 07/17/12 2:35pm

Genesia

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Oh - and let me say for the record that if they do this for Parade, I will shit twice and die.

We don’t mourn artists because we knew them. We mourn them because they helped us know ourselves.
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Reply #12 posted 07/17/12 2:40pm

electricberet

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Genesia said:



electricberet said:


Genesia said:

Okay, just for the record...these are reissues - not remasters.



They don't sound any different than the original vinyl (trust me, I have both issues of Purple Rain) - they are just heavier-weight vinyl.



Dirty Mind, Controversy, and 1999 were remastered by Bernie Grundman for these reissues. That was confirmed to me in an email from an assistant at his studio. You can also confirm it yourself by checking the writing in the deadwax and comparing it to the originals. They were not remixed, however. As to the sound quality, that is subjective but I think at least the reissue of Dirty Mind sounds better than my original vinyl pressing. See here: http://prince.org/msg/7/357631 And here: http://www.stevehoffman.t...p?t=243637


I stand corrected - thanks.



Odd that they can re-master the vinyl albums, but they do nothing about the awful CD mastering, isn't it?



Prince is on an anti-digital crusade right now, so I guess that explains it.

Incidentally, the Japanese SHM-CDs that were pressed a few years ago and are due to be reissued have had some tweaking done to them, although they don't seem to have gone back to the analog tapes. I compared the peak volume levels on the SHM-CD of 1999, and everything was louder except D.M.S.R., which was not on the first CD pressing:

http://www.stevehoffman.t...amp;page=2

That may end up being the closest we ever get to official digital remasters.
The Census Bureau estimates that there are 2,518 American Indians and Alaska Natives currently living in the city of Long Beach.
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Reply #13 posted 07/17/12 8:16pm

callimnate

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Oh God. Here I am trying to get rid of my vinyl, and here you are trying to start up a collection!

8-S

confused confused confused confused confused confused confused confused confused
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Reply #14 posted 07/18/12 12:13am

trickster

trc on vinyl, GREAT.... thats the one i missed mad

[Edited 7/18/12 0:14am]

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Reply #15 posted 07/18/12 6:00am

databank

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Did Bernie G. say that he remastered the albums or did he say that he remastered the albums for these releases?

I'm asking because Prince also claimed to have had the albums remastered in 2010, and that where WB would have to remaster the original master, Prince can remaster the pre-master track, and that has obvious consequences on the result.

So I don't wanna doubt anyone's word or anything, just make sure there is no ambiguity regarding WHAT Bernie G. has remastered and whether he did it for WB and we got it on these vinyl, or whether he did it for Prince for a future, post-WB, re-issue program (or both, since maybe both WB and Prince asked him to do the job twice lol ).

A COMPREHENSIVE PRINCE DISCOGRAPHY (work in progress ^^): https://sites.google.com/...scography/
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Reply #16 posted 07/18/12 6:51am

electricberet

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databank said:

Did Bernie G. say that he remastered the albums or did he say that he remastered the albums for these releases?

I'm asking because Prince also claimed to have had the albums remastered in 2010, and that where WB would have to remaster the original master, Prince can remaster the pre-master track, and that has obvious consequences on the result.

So I don't wanna doubt anyone's word or anything, just make sure there is no ambiguity regarding WHAT Bernie G. has remastered and whether he did it for WB and we got it on these vinyl, or whether he did it for Prince for a future, post-WB, re-issue program (or both, since maybe both WB and Prince asked him to do the job twice lol ).

This is the email I received back from someone at Bernie Grundman Mastering in May 2011:

Yes those titles were remastered at our studio by Bernie. We received the original tapes and remastered them, using the original first pressings as references.

We did the work back in January of this year.

If you examine the deadwax on the reissues, you'll see his initials BG. Bernie did not write his initials in most of the albums he mastered back in the 1980s as explained by a member of the Steve Hoffman forum in the link I posted earlier. Usually his mastering work can be identified by his distinctive handwriting, especially the way he writes the number "2." The original vinyl pressings of these Prince albums don't have his initials in the deadwax (or at least that is true of Dirty Mind, which is the album I was focusing on for comparison purposes). I don't know why he decided to write his initials on the reissues, but he did.

Another member of the Steve Hoffman forum also wrote to BGM to ask about the possibility of future remasters on vinyl, and was told it was up to Rhino. (For those who don't know, Steve Hoffman is a mastering engineer and he has a forum for audiophiles.)

[Edited 7/18/12 6:55am]

The Census Bureau estimates that there are 2,518 American Indians and Alaska Natives currently living in the city of Long Beach.
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Reply #17 posted 07/18/12 10:37am

Poplife88

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I'd give my left nut for Gold Experience AND Rainbow Children on vinyl. razz

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Reply #18 posted 07/18/12 10:49am

imago

Genesia said:

Oh - and let me say for the record that if they do this for Parade, I will shit twice and die.

falloff

That shit is going in my signature.

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Reply #19 posted 07/18/12 11:09am

Genesia

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imago said:

Genesia said:

Oh - and let me say for the record that if they do this for Parade, I will shit twice and die.

falloff

That shit is going in my signature.

touched

We don’t mourn artists because we knew them. We mourn them because they helped us know ourselves.
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Reply #20 posted 07/18/12 1:33pm

Tremolina

electricberet said:

They were not remixed, however.

Critical tho. Since for every new form of pressing, such as this one on 180grams vinyl, you technically need a "master" or "re-master". The million dollar question is: did they simply copy the original tapes one on one for a 180 gram pressing, or did they also truly change and enhance the sound of the recordings, which would require some form of "remixing" as well in case of tweaking and adjusting the sound of the settings of each individual instrumental or vocal track. More than often, that is what people are thinking when they are hearing "remasters".

[Edited 7/18/12 13:56pm]

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Reply #21 posted 07/18/12 3:33pm

electricberet

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Tremolina said:

electricberet said:

They were not remixed, however.

Critical tho. Since for every new form of pressing, such as this one on 180grams vinyl, you technically need a "master" or "re-master". The million dollar question is: did they simply copy the original tapes one on one for a 180 gram pressing, or did they also truly change and enhance the sound of the recordings, which would require some form of "remixing" as well in case of tweaking and adjusting the sound of the settings of each individual instrumental or vocal track. More than often, that is what people are thinking when they are hearing "remasters".

[Edited 7/18/12 13:56pm]

You're right that these terms are misunderstood. However, a mastering engineer can improve the sound of a recording without going back to the individual multitrack tapes and remixing it. The albums couldn't be remixed from the multitrack tapes without Prince being involved. When he talked about his albums being remastered in 2010, he may have been referring to some remixes that he did. I can't see Prince being satisfied with just releasing the original mixes remastered for slightly improved sound (which is what Bernie did for these vinyl reissues).

The Census Bureau estimates that there are 2,518 American Indians and Alaska Natives currently living in the city of Long Beach.
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Reply #22 posted 07/18/12 5:03pm

UncleGrandpa

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Genesia said:

Oh - and let me say for the record that if they do this for Parade, I will shit twice and die.



Thanks for the chuckles, for the sake of the thread, I'd shit three times and be in a coma for eight years if the same happend.




p.s... not really but it would give me girl quakes to see that come about.
Jeux Sans Frontiers
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Reply #23 posted 07/18/12 6:42pm

tbag

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electricberet said:

Tremolina said:

Critical tho. Since for every new form of pressing, such as this one on 180grams vinyl, you technically need a "master" or "re-master". The million dollar question is: did they simply copy the original tapes one on one for a 180 gram pressing, or did they also truly change and enhance the sound of the recordings, which would require some form of "remixing" as well in case of tweaking and adjusting the sound of the settings of each individual instrumental or vocal track. More than often, that is what people are thinking when they are hearing "remasters".

[Edited 7/18/12 13:56pm]

You're right that these terms are misunderstood. However, a mastering engineer can improve the sound of a recording without going back to the individual multitrack tapes and remixing it. The albums couldn't be remixed from the multitrack tapes without Prince being involved. When he talked about his albums being remastered in 2010, he may have been referring to some remixes that he did. I can't see Prince being satisfied with just releasing the original mixes remastered for slightly improved sound (which is what Bernie did for these vinyl reissues).

Yep and you know if he remixed them, he edited them. Can you imagine that D.M.S.R. lyric "Work that body like a whore" changed to "Work that body like you want some more"? It scares the shite out of me! The George Lucas of music!!

~And even when I'm right, I'll be wrong...it's Automatic too.
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Reply #24 posted 07/18/12 10:55pm

databank

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^ I bet you my ass that he won't change A THING in the lyrics or music.

A COMPREHENSIVE PRINCE DISCOGRAPHY (work in progress ^^): https://sites.google.com/...scography/
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Reply #25 posted 07/19/12 10:55am

Tremolina

electricberet said:

Tremolina said:

Critical tho. Since for every new form of pressing, such as this one on 180grams vinyl, you technically need a "master" or "re-master". The million dollar question is: did they simply copy the original tapes one on one for a 180 gram pressing, or did they also truly change and enhance the sound of the recordings, which would require some form of "remixing" as well in case of tweaking and adjusting the sound of the settings of each individual instrumental or vocal track. More than often, that is what people are thinking when they are hearing "remasters".

[Edited 7/18/12 13:56pm]

You're right that these terms are misunderstood. However, a mastering engineer can improve the sound of a recording without going back to the individual multitrack tapes and remixing it.

Yes, that's true, but his possibilities are more limited because he can only improve all the tracks together, instead of also each different track.

The albums couldn't be remixed from the multitrack tapes without Prince being involved. When he talked about his albums being remastered in 2010, he may have been referring to some remixes that he did. I can't see Prince being satisfied with just releasing the original mixes remastered for slightly improved sound (which is what Bernie did for these vinyl reissues).

My guess as well.

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Reply #26 posted 07/19/12 2:41pm

vainandy

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I already have the vinyl. No need to duplicate it.

Andy is a four letter word.
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Reply #27 posted 07/22/12 4:34pm

electricberet

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I just stopped by my local Best Buy. They have almost completely liquidated their vinyl section, but they had a few of these Prince reissues for $10. I bought one of each so that I will have extra copies to sell or trade when they are out of print. That's a great price, especially for 1999.
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Reply #28 posted 07/22/12 5:58pm

Replica

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I think the difference between the remaster of Dirty Mind and the original is easy to hear. It's more crisp, punchy and thicker sounding drums, still maintaining the original feel.

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