My lp is on order. Will report back.
new Allison Krause & Robert Plant Pressing seems noisy
Just dropped on vinyl today. been waiting a good decade for a follow up to Raising Sand and while this material is fantastic, seems like I got a noisy pressing. Not many pops and clicks but noise is there on everything. Switched to 10 other albums and dead quiet. Getting the same jam on the clearaudio Stradivari v2, Benz LP-S, and the new super slick Goldenberg Brilliant cart. Ran it through a few washes, a tad better, but it's got a noisy floor. Wonder if anyone else is getting this.
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How do you know that? I can't speak to this particular record yet, I will have it soon, , but I've purchased at least 300 new records in the past year or so and except for a few have had very little or no noise. I do clean them before I play them so I don't know what they are like before they are cleaned, but I view cleaning all records as an essential part of the process so it really doesn't matter to me what they are like before they are cleaned.
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Cleaning won't help a bad pressing. Buying 300 other records says nothing about this one. Even buying this same record and having it be good won't really tell us anything conclusive. Because with 2 samples one noisy one quiet 50/50 still doesn't tell us which one is the norm. That is why I said you only have to return it one to 5 times to find out. The same has always been true, but back in the day there never were any records, at least not that I ever saw, that were as bad as what I have seen today. In the last several years I have seen bits of paper melted into the vinyl, dips so severe they cannot be tracked, noise so uniformly bad it intrudes even when the music is loud, warps so bad even my clamp won't flatten, and on and on. Back in the day we thought a tick or pop was worth a return. By that standard almost nothing today is a keeper. I know now someone will tell us how wonderful dead silent flat hot stamper yada yada yada their last 5 million new records were. Yay! Happy for you. |
do you even take the time to think about what others have posted or just go spouting off with your profound wisdom? I opened with "I can’t speak to this particular record" and you come back paraphrasing what I just said as if it is a revelation. That aside, the vast majority of records I’ve purchased have been excellent pressings. Anyone reading your post could easily conclude all current pressings are crap. My experience is exactly the opposite. |
@herman , The record is noisy because of the conditions it was subject to during it's manfacture. All the records pressin that run were subject to the exact same conditions. If the stamper was bad, all the records that come off that stamper (1000) will be just as noisy. If you wait until another run is made you might get a quiet one. @millercarbon , I politely disagree. I returned a lot more records in the old days than I do now as a percentage. I have had a few really bad ones recently. In the old days I have to say that european classical records were uniformly wonderful. But, popular music when they pressed hundreds of thousands of copies were hit or miss. I must have returned one in five records back then. |
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