Best song for immediate impact when presenting or testing?


I, as most of you, have my regular tunes that I play or listen to when trying out a new system or playing music for friends. My current starter is 'Feels like Rain' by Aaron Neville. It engages me immediately because I love it so, but it is also very well recorded and has a bass voice doing backup which in the right system has a real visceral impact.

I was at an Audio shop recently, listening to my standards, and wanted to show the sales consultant a piece that he might not have heard. I played 'Golden Rust' off the Miles Gurtu album. After about 30 seconds, he pulled out his device and added the song to his favorites. I asked why did he add so quickly, and he said that the opening electronica had a three dimensional stereophonic quality that made a remarkable impression right off the bat. I paraphrase lightly; that was his comment.

What pieces do you play of any genre that have an immediate impact, especially for people listening to a good system for the first time?
128x128cmjones
Well, I fall back on a couple of old demo faves -- Stimela by Hugh Masekela and Spanish Harlem by Rebecca Pidgeon. My go-to standards for male vocal and female vocal.

Stimela by Hugh Masekela
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OjPrcRjN0VM

Spanish Harlem by Rebecca Pidgeon
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_RMTEWsGGEg
For vocals:
”Heavenly” by Harry Connick Jr.
”How Far I’ll Go” From Moana 
“I’ll Cover You” From Rent film soundtrack

For bass:
”Look What You Made Me Do” by Taylor Swift
”Come Alive” from The Greatest Showman

Return To Forever Returns, live show from 2009, cut 5, Song to the Pharaoh Kings.  This will test the limits of your speakers.  See if your passives, if you have them will survive.  Also a great test of your active woofers.  Cheers.
Thanks to all who joined this conversation in the spirit intended. I'll listen to all.

As mentioned, I usually start with Aaron Neville's Feels Like Rain. Next is Time After Time, Eva Cassidy. Taj Mahal: Queen Bee. Angelique Kidjo, Summertime. Girl From Ipanema, Getz Gilberto (this song played on a good system in 1995, brought me into hi quality systems). Then I take requests, and finish up with The End by the Beatles. If they're in the mood for something downbeat, You Want it Darker, by Leonard Cohen.

Fudai - shame.
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I’m curious. What does it say about the ears, listening skills and sought for sound quality on this entire forum when so few classical cuts or movements are mentioned. A system either can or cannot re create the experience of a full symphony orchestra in full stride on a great recording. Voice of known artists also, solo instruments also. Everything else is color and whatever sounds good to you. Nothing wrong with that but not the same thing. Among many others I could mention I suggest Aaron Copland Appalachian Spring Leonard Bernstein New York Philharmonic.

For the record I listen to rock and jazz as much as classical.
F.K.A Twigs, self-titled EP, side 2
Janelle Monae, Dirty Computer, side 1 LP 1
Marion Hill, Act One (expanded 2 LP set), side C
Goldfrapp, Silver Eye, the whole damn thing
Noisia, Split The Atom, title track
G.O.L. The Sensation Of Tone, Angelica In Delerium
Bassnectar, Reflective Part 1 and 2, side 1
The Dazz Band, Let It Whip
Commodores, self-titled, Brick House

That should do it for starters. . . 

Steve
Sleep walk ,is a classic , for hard rock peace in Mississippi -Jimi H
Led Zep - communication Breakdown , or Jeff Becks Classic -
because we ended as lovers
Hhmmm...

if I really want to test the quality of a sound system in respect
of spatiality and impact to new listeners my choices are:

Roger Waters - The ballad of Bill Hubbard (Amused to death)
=> the more on the left side the radio speaker is, the better the sound system
Malia - Don´t explain (Black orchid)
=> the vibraphon is behind (!!!) the listener
Eurythmics - I love you like a ball and chain (Be yourself tonight)
=> close to the end of the song the voices are marching around you
Fever Ray - Keep the streets empty for me (Fever ray)
=> the intro sound dots are moving from down left to higher right
Yello - Takla makan (Touch Yello)
=> the soundscape of a virtual movie plot can make people stunned

Best to have a minimum of 3 ref tracks for your listening tests.  I use 12.  You are not looking for a target song, but a fence collection.  You want to hear the edges.

@cymbop You might be interested in knowing that Steely Dan, among others (Eagles) did some final mixes using Magnepan speakers.  

Cheers!
Siri's Svale Band ‎– Blackbird (1st cut) - sold many a speaker. Joseph Audio used it as their demo SF Stereophile show in '80s?

Makes you want to start smoking again . . . and by a ticket to Norway. 

In the 1970’s JBL put out an LP intended to be used to evaluate the sound of their new L100 loudspeaker. The LP contains tracks from commercially released albums, one of which is "Donovan’s Colors" from Van Dyke Parks’ Song Cycle album. The recording contains many different instruments (including harpsichord), as well as some non-instrument sound effects. The song (and the entire album) is as musically interesting as it is sonically stunning. Song Cycle was Van Dyke’s first project after he finished his work with Brian Wilson on the ill-fated Smile album. Song Cycle is very unique, and many will find it not only odd and strange, but also a little spooky. Parks’ is a very, very smart guy, perhaps a genius.

Speaking of odd, strange, and spooky, for a look at what Smile was going to be (a musical representation and celebration of Manifest Destiny), and why it would have been such a milestone album (beating Sgt. Pepper to the marketplace as was intended), listen to "Fall Breaks And Back To Winter (Woody Woodpecker Symphony)" on the Beach Boys’ Smiley Smile album. Now THAT is what I consider Progressive music. The Beach Boys Progressive?! No, Brian Wilson. Don’t believe it? Go ahead, listen to "FBABTW". It makes Progressive bands sound downright traditional!

Nina Nastasia    This Familiar Way

Tracy Bonham   Noonday Demon

Kinnie Starr  Come

Valerie Carter  Back To Blue Somemore
I agree that you can easily select music for impact that doesn't do much other than show off one or two characteristics of a given piece of equipment.  Like a lot of others here, I have a ton of music that I listen to that gives the whole picture of a system.  Recently I upgraded my entire system and spent two hours listening to hi-res files, SACD, CD and vinyl to be sure that the combination of gear I was considering delivered me to that place where its just the music.  I'm a rock & roll guy so 90% of my collection is just that.  Here's a partial list of the music I used to evaluate my new system:

"Hotel California" from the Eagles - Hell Freezes Over (digital)
"Lines on My Face" from a 40 year old original vinyl pressing of Frampton Comes Alive
"The Chain" from Fleetwood Mac - The Dance (vinyl & digital)
"Squonk" from Genesis - A Trick of the Tail (digital)
"No Quarter" from Led Zeppelin - Celebration Day (digital)
"Gaucho" from Steely Dan - Gaucho (digital)
"On an Island" from David Gilmour - Live in Gdansk (digital)
"Brothers in Arms" from Dire Straits - On the Night (digital)
"Captain Fanstastic & the Brown Dirt Cowboy" from Elton John - Captain Fantastic & the Brown Dirt Cowboy (digital & vinyl)

There is so much more, but you get the drift.

As you can tell, I'm all about live and classic rock.  Can't help that I am a child of the 60's, 70's and 80's.

Whatever you do, remember, its about the music not the gear.  The gear is simply a vehicle.
I think the more traditional country artists have some of the cleanest recordings around.  For clarity I don't think you can beat the recordings of Randy Travis. The quality of his voice is fantastic.   For classical the Chesky recording of Itzhak Perlman playing Tchaikovsky violin Concerto in D is my personal favorite.  His violin just hangs out in the air in front of you.  For rock my money is on Dire Straits "Your Latest Trick".  I love the way the sax starts out low in the background then moves right in front of you. And finally for bass I have to go with Josh Groban's "Try to Remember".  
Too many to list but the one playing right now; Jennifer Warnes - Joan of Arc. 
On Agon i came across a song "Breaking Silence" by Janis Ian, that apparently was all the rage for demos when it came out in ’93. The song is a bit on the cheesy side IMO but the recording is fantastic. iIs punchy and dynamic, it has a lot of stereo field gimmicks on it and its short so it does a terrific job for demos.

Its not the kind of track i would listen to for enjoyment per se but if you want an idea of what a rig is capable of this one covers several bases. My gf and I joke about the song all the time but when we were at the Hifi show in Manhattan a couple months ago it was our go to suggestion and it really worked well to identify the strengths and weaknesses of several rigs alien to our ears.
Oops. To clarify on Dire Straits "Your Latest Trick", it's actually a trumpet that starts out low in the back of the stage and then the sax that comes to the front.  Great effect non the less.
Into Your Arms -- Nick Cave 
I created many Nick Cave fans after playing, great natural mid bass and deep vocals

Radiohead --  Codex   
I think it's a simple song about spiritual awaking/welcoming  and the music supports Thom York's meaning

This list gives me a nice cross-section of musical tastes and moods that I typically find myself engaging in and brings out the best in my admittedly mid-fi system:

Frank Morgan "Mood Indigo" CD
Miles Davis "Freddie The Freeloader" from "Kind Of Blue"
Jaco Pastorius "Continuum" off his self-title debut album
Bob Dylan "Things Have Changed"
Lyle Lovett (anything)
Pat Metheny (anything)
Steely Dan (most anything, but "Only A Fool Would Say That" from "Can't Buy A Thrill" and "West Of Hollywood" off "Two Against Nature" in particular)
Dave Grusin’s "Migration" CD
Shivaree, track "Goodnight Moon"
Jerry Joseph "Happy Book"
Karl Richter’s interpretation of Bach’s "Toccata and Fugue in D Minor"
Alison Krauss + Union Station "Live" CD
Mahler’s 9th from Claudio Abbado + Lucerne Festival Orchestra



+1 for Bozzio Stevens & Levin "Black Light Syndrome"  entire album!
Also Glenn Hughes "The Way it is" and Joe Satriani (self titled)😎
Dead Can Dance “Yulunga Spirit Dancer” from Into The Labyrinth
Also, this entire thread is a great reference!
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Famous Blue Raincoat by Jennifer Warnes  —  the song from the album of the same name. Crystal clear highs , well defined bass and a near perfect reproduction of the female vocalist. I never go on any audio journey without it. And I love the song.
Nice to find some new ones to try ...

A couple mentions here of my usuals:
Brubeck Take 5
Holly Cole off Temptation ... usually Train Song but several work

A new favorite is Hallelujah from The (Canadian) Tenors
For listeners that enjoy vocals, especially female vocals: "Bells and Roses", "If I Were a Man", or anything else really on Roseanne Cash's 10 Song Demo album. This audition made a wife of a buddy insist he upgrade his gear in several ways I suggested.

Somewhat more tawdry: "Free Me" off Joss Stone's album Colour Me Free.

OK, tawdry-er yet, Lou Reed performing "Sweet Jane" on the Live on Letterman: Music From The Late Show.

And, for flat out out crazy, ignite a party, turn it up tawdry-ness, "Snow Bunny" by Bootsy Collins off of his World Wide Funk disc.

Or, whatever they want to hear... ;-)

Qui, Qui and more Qui.  More sound in a groove than a full orchestra and you can hear every single sound.  
Frank Sinatra "Live at the Sands", "One for my Baby".
I appreciate the 3 dimensional clinking off the champagne glasses when the song is recognized and the buss boy cleaning off the bar.

A few from my test CD's

New Years Eve on the Waterfront - Peter Schneider and the Stimulators
Temple Caves- Micky Hart, Planet Drum
Beat Hotel - Allen Taylor
A Perfect Moment - Art Garfunkel
Gravity - Jesse Cook

Always fun to learn about new music!
1. Gino Vanelli’s Powerful People 1974
2. I second Take Five, Dave Brubeck
3. Chuck Mangione’s Children of Sanchez 1978
4. The Feeling of Jazz by Dianne Reeves with Wynton Marsalis

My first choice ( a “GREAT” prentation track chosen then by the store) Im a senior in HS and listen to this in North Miami Beach at the very first Sound Advice store (now long gone high-end chain started with drug money). Saved up and bought my first pair of Infinity’s. Gino still has an amazing voice! The entire album “POWERFUL PEOPLE” is stellar. 

# 2 A top 5 all-time jazz hit 

# 4 last year in Tampa Florida “made me” buy new speakers replacing B&W N802’s with Paradigm Persona 7F’s. A Very good digital presentation track listen to it and you can understand the store using it as a great demo track.

# 3 the percussion and Chuck’s flugelhorn are terrific!

Happy listening to all, looking forward to everyone’s responses..
Dave

Haelos Full Circle Album:  Pray
                                           Dust
                                            Earth Not Above

NOTE:  People are surprise by such an undiscovered group from the UK

Beck Albumn:  Heart is a Drum
                         Morning
NOTE:  Heard this plenty at the Rocky Mountain Audio Fest

London Grammar:  Hey Now

Weltentraum Live Albumn by Michael Wollny
Little Person

NOTE:  Best demo for bass extension you will ever hear

Billie Jean. Winterplay
Tin Pan Alley. SRV
Jack of Speed. Steely Dan
Melody. Stones
Weird Fishes. Radiohead
These are more of a list of speaker test songs. They will definitely show you how the different styles sound but they won’t really blow your hair back. 
My main album to audition speakers for the past few years has been "Another Lifetime" by Simon Phillips.  It is well written, well played and very well recorded.  I got them to play it in the SVS room at Capital Audiofest a few years ago and in the 5 minutes it was playing, three different people picked-up the case to see what it was.  It takes about 2 minutes for it to really get going.  https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bz-Vs-jdJIU
For rafter-shaking bass - Last mvmt. of the Mahler 10th conducted by Simon Rattle with the Bournemouth, which contains more of the Mahler "thuds" than the other last 5 symphonies.
For tightness of drum shots - "Tricycle" by Flim and the BB's
Not sure what everyones criteria for testing out a system but I don't understand how some of the listed tunes above can provide any valuable input.  Just my opinion.  I look for more natural recordings of instruments and vocals, something with dynamic swings, and complex passages.  I want to know how a system reproduces the space in the soundstage and the tone of each instrument.

Jaco Pastorius, Rickie Lee Jones POP POP, just to name a few.

Happy Listening.  
This thread has been making me happy all week.  I made a playlist in Roon (why oh why is there not an easy way to export this for other Roonies?)  Between Tidal and Qobuz, only 2-3 of these titles can't be streamed.

Even the stuff that's outside my wheelhouse has been worth a spin.  

Thanks, guys.
Kandace Springs Breakdown
La Vie (Pop Mix) Philippe Saisse
Elton John Rocket Man    Honky Chateau
Gordon Lightfoot   If You Could Read My Mind 
It Ain't No Use   Trombone Shorty   Parking Lot Symphony
Lake Street Dive  I Want You Back    Fun Machine
Whirlpool  Seal  The Rare Collection
a-ha  The Sun Always Shines on TV   MTV Unplugged Summer Solstice
Michael Hedges   Aerial Boundaries   Pure Michael Hedges
Splendor in the Grass   Pink Martini
God of Wonders  Paul Baloche   (live)
The Ladder  Paula Cole   Harbinger
I Don't Know   Shawn Colvin   The Greatest 60's Album 
Along the Road  Dan Fogelberg   Live at Carnegie Hall
Friends   Brandt Brauer Frick Ensemble    Mr Machine
Be Here Now   Ray LaMontagne   Til the Sun Turns Black
Driving    Everything But the Girl    Acoustic
(Sittin' On) The Dock of the Bay  Sara Barieilles   Brave Enough: Live at the Variety Playhouse
The Windmills of Your Mind   Alison Moyet   Voice (reissue Deluxe)
Cantaloop (Flip Out)  Manhattan Transfer   The Junction 
Humilitas    Lesiem    Auracle 

I didn't select these to impress people, but are some that I use in assessment of audio system performance. However, with an extreme system several of these are impressive performances.  In reviewing I use lists such as this to not only tell the limits of the system's performance, but tune the system.