Author | Message |
remaster For You first You can have your PR's, SOTT's. They are okay for now until they get to them in the near future. For You needs to be remastered first. The material is that great (albeit conventional) but the murkiness underminds the songs. SOTT still sounds at least decent unmastered. For You, not so much.
. [Edited 11/7/16 18:27pm] | |
- E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator |
Im all for going as far back as possible!
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The self titled Prince album needs remastering with the long version of Sexy Dancer included. | |
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They are remastered! I have For You and Prince on vinyl, and they sound great. (I do think Dirty Mind gained the most from remastering though.) Sorry, it's the Hodgkin's talking. | |
- E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator |
Whether or not they're remastered makes zolcho difference to me and I reckon it meant zilcho to Prince as well. The master was the mixdown and since he was cutting vinyl at the time, there's little way round the fact that to return to the master and rebalance it for another vinyl cut is POINTLESSNESS INCARNATE. [Edited 11/7/16 23:41pm] “I don't believe anything, but I have many suspicions.”
-Robert Anton Wilson | |
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It seems that WB Will release other Deluxe edition after Purple Rain....and the campaign should begin in 2017!
This is some info i heard from some1 Who works 4 WB. ...but until his official confirmation. ..take This with a big grain of salt ! [Edited 11/8/16 4:57am] [Edited 11/8/16 4:58am] [Edited 11/8/16 4:59am] | |
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Remastering has ruined almost everything it touches ... the compression for the sake of competing with skrillex ... just a dumb process for the dumb ass mp3 generation that prefers their music to come from video games and beer comercials ... A con sold as an improvement | |
- E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator |
. Bully for you - BUT for those of us who are into vinyl... Know what I mean?? | |
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Stand at the crossroads, and look, and ask for the ancient paths...(Jeremiah 6:16) www.ancientfaithradio.com
dezinonac eb lliw noitulove ehT | |
- E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator |
. There is good remastering and bad remastering. . And also great... and also horrible... . The right mastering engineer can make a positive impact on a thirty year old recording. . If it was as simple as turning on the iTunes equalizer, then "mastering engineer" wouldn't be a job title.
[Edited 11/8/16 8:27am] | |
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YES
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- E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator |
True!
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What was wrong with the original mastering? I still have all my original vinyl (For You through Batman) and it sounds great. We don’t mourn artists because we knew them. We mourn them because they helped us know ourselves. | |
- E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator |
You're completely wrong, of course. The original mix down tapes are what were sent to be mastered. For You was undoubtedly mastered primarily for vinyl. The master tape is the mastered version of the mix downs. The mix downs sound great in the studio. REmastering is taking the original mixes (not the oringial masters), and starting over with a completely new mastering session. It is NOTHING like opening the equalizer in iTunes. As a studio person I've been part of mastering sessions and it is sooo much more than you realize. [Edited 11/8/16 14:10pm] | |
- E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator |
I think most consumers aren't interested in vinyl and as the analog to digital tranfers were particularly awful and the mastering for the early records focused on vinyl a remaster is needed. Rebuying the vinyl might not be necessary, but digital is the medium of choice these days. The Beatles suffered a similar plague in the analog to digital conversion and the Beatles remasters sounds incredible. If you A/B a Beatles CD from the 1980s with one of the new remasters the results are jaw-dropping. I'm not sure there's quite as much room for improvement with Prince, but there is defintely improvement to be had. I'm not talking about volume war stuff at all, just overall quality. | |
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Ok, so nobody wants remasters. Got it | |
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Iamtheorg said: Ok, so nobody wants remasters. Got it I want them! Can you imagine if the difference was a huge as the difference between the Beatles 80s CDs and the new-ish Beatles remasters? It's like night and day. | |
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As a bonus track, sure - but replacing the album version in sequence is not the way to go. | |
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From Steve Hoffman (a good, simple explanation.)
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- E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator |
Okay, but if you re-read me, I did understand that part. I mention the multitrack masters because around and about you will find an enthusiasm for 'remasters' that seems to assume a remix has been performed.
I may be ever-so-slightly facetious in saying about mastering 'it's like opening the equaliser in iTunes' but I'm not wrong, technically, because mastering IS opening a fixed mixdown of a finished balanced track and then EQing it for a medium (vinyl and CD for example having their own needs).
The greater point was that although I would agree that some of the 80's releases were sonically questionable in some aspects and on some tracks, this was a view, expressed hundreds of times over the years by fans, that was to do with MIXING choices not MASTERING choices. I could see a case for going back to the multitracks to pull up some balances but until the fad changes (back) to 'Remix your own version' (Bowie, Prince, McCartney, Gabriel et al at various points since the 90's and Dhani Harrison/The Beatles very slyly via 'Rock Band'), then the only reason I'd want a new vinyl copy of a Prince album would be because I dropped something on it one time that made for a clunk of a scratch.
The original vinyl mastering made me want to buy Prince. I bought it. I'd like to buy some new Prince now, please.
But to go on a bit more about the remastering fad, this reached mainstream saturation after The Beatles remasters started coming out on CD and then vinyl in stereo and then mono from 2009 onwards. Reviews were ecstatic, promoting the value of remastering etc etc. [Edited 11/10/16 11:52am] “I don't believe anything, but I have many suspicions.”
-Robert Anton Wilson | |
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