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Black Album sound quality I just recently acquired a copy of the official 1994 Black Album CD as well as a bootleg CD from the late 80's (I presume) that has 8 bonus tracks on it after the main album, and to my ears the bootleg surprisingly sounded better than the official release. Does anyone know why this is? | |
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I’m not an expert on the subject so I may not get all the terminology correct, but I reckon I can summarise the issue. | |
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Out of curiosity, are the additional tracks on your bootleg CD Witness, Wonderful Ass, Last Heart, Moviestar, A Place In Heaven, Girl O My Dreams, Can't Stop This Feeling I Got & We Can Funk? | |
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Yes, those are the extra tracks. | |
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I thought it was because the constant tape dubbing process associated with bootlegging makes the copies sound "thicker" with more "punch." Like if you took an album and recorded it to cassette, it might be technically sonically "inferior" but might sound "better" from an energy/vibe perspective. Some prefer old bootlegs to some of the "pristine" quality Vault releases we've gotten so far, for instance. Could be wrong. [Edited 2/6/20 19:35pm] | |
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The difference in quality changes those particular songs so much, doesn't it? | |
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WhisperingDandelions said: I thought it was because the constant tape dubbing process associated with bootlegging makes the copies sound "thicker" with more "punch." Like if you took an album and recorded it to cassette, it might be technically sonically "inferior" but might sound "better" from an energy/vibe perspective. Some prefer old bootlegs to some of the "pristine" quality Vault releases we've gotten so far, for instance. Could be wrong. [Edited 2/6/20 19:35pm] Hi WhisperingDandelions, With regards to you first point of the cassette copies giving the LP more punch. It is true (at least from what I've read) that as the album circulated on cassette the bass did become thicker with every generation that passed. However the OP is referring to a pressed CD bootleg which sounds like it was recorded direct from vinyl. It's been ages since I've listen to this specific boot, but I don't remember it sounding like a third / fourth generation copy. With regards to the CD volume, I was afraid that the subject of brick walling and the loudness wars would come up. In my subjective opinion there is a difference between optimising music for CD and brick walling. There may be purists who disagree with me on this, but in my opinion albums like Originals and 1999 remastered have had their dynamic range squeezed to give the volume a boost, but they do not clip and have retained all the detailed quality that is usually lost in the loudness war. As such I wouldn't call them brick walled, just mastered in line with digital limitations. With regards to what I said about a low ceiling, this is my experience. Take a mid range turn table, amp and speakers (the type of set up that most households would have had in the 80s), and play an 80s Prince LP. The chances are that at 40% to 60% percent volume capacity you'll be able to hear the music comfortably with no issue. In contrast if you were to take a 90s/00s midi hifi and play the same album from CD then your going to need to crank the sound to near max to get comparable volume. Both the CD and vinyl use the same master tapes and retain the same dynamic range, but to prevent the CD from clipping the volume has to remain low. | |
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I once obtained a 'remastered' version of The Black Album by DJ Foefur. This is the version I still listen to today. It is not brickwalled too much and is sounding better to me than the original 1994 CD, with fuller bass and clearer mids and highs. RIP Prince: thank U 4 a funky Time... | |
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Don't hate your neighbors. Hate the media that tells you to hate your neighbors. | |
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[Edited 2/7/20 9:44am] Don't hate your neighbors. Hate the media that tells you to hate your neighbors. | |
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The Foefur re-master, while not perfect, shows how great this album sounds with a bit more clarity, shine. The released version is quite muddy and submerged (which I like too) but the re-master really highlights the instrumentation and the hooks on the record. I think it's a must at some point to re-master "The Black Album" & "SOTT". | |
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The digital version off of Tidal is the best I've heard, but that's comparing it to the low volume bootleg cassette that I had and the limited edition CD version that I had before it was stolen.
It could be remastered even better, but I'm satisfied with the louder volume that I've got for now.
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its insane...the other black album bootleg with offs and all my dreams is also better quality | |
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VaultCurator said: Out of curiosity, are the additional tracks on your bootleg CD Witness, Wonderful Ass, Last Heart, Moviestar, A Place In Heaven, Girl O My Dreams, Can't Stop This Feeling I Got & We Can Funk? That's the one I purchased years ago, a picture of Prince and Sheila E walking together All u haters need to recognize, if u cant c right through these lies, good gawd! | |
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