Music Matters Blue notes


I have Art Blakey's "Night in Tunisia", and I think it's the classic 180g re-issue.
The sound is pretty good (maybe a little bit dry) but the soundstage is fairly limited. I am just wondering if the Music Matters version would be that much better? Any thoughts from people who have both? Or other MM re-issues in cases where they also have stereo re-issues?
Thanks for your help,
B
mantisory
Jazzdoc, did I get a bad copy of Parlan's "Us Three?" I was very disappointed in the sonics of this one compared with "Hank Mobley's "Soul Station" and the Parlan quintet's "Speakin' My Piece," both of which sound spectacular. By contrast, my copy of "Us Three," a piano trio album, reflects the well-chronicled issues with piano recording by Van Gelder, at least in his early days. Music is fine, though. Dave
Dave, with respect to the Horace Parlan "Us Three" MM 45 reissue, I had the same impression as you. The music is great, and the sound is dynamic/propulsive. However, the recording quality is mediocre in capturing the sound of the piano and inferior to the sound quality of some of the other Blue Note sessions.

I also have 33-1/3rpm LP versions of all these Blue Note Horace Parlan sessions (another Mosaic Records reissue box set). At some point, I intend to listen to some excerpts from both the Music Matters pressings and the Mosaic Records pressings to judge the comparative sound quality. I suspect that Music Matters is getting everything possible from the underlying master tapes but that there are some inherent problems with recording quality for some of these sessions.
Maybe I'm so used to the RVG piano sound that I find I am able to listen around it. I agree, the Mobley album is spectacular, even better than the 200 gm version.
AFAIK Classic Records never did Art Blakey's "Night in Tunisia". Does it have "BG" in the dead wax? If it doesn't and it's 180g I suspect it is a Scorpio re-issue which was taken from the CD. The sound on the MM issue should be a huge step up.
A bit off subject: The only version of "Night in Tunisia" that I've managed to hang onto is from "Live at Birdland I" with Clifford Brown, Horace Silver, Lou Donaldson, and Curley Russell. It's a bit perfunctory in some parts but is snappy and has a spontaneous raucous edge I like.

JPO