New Vinyl - "scratchy"?


I got the 2LP, 180g vinyl set of Jeff Beck, Live at Ronnie Scott's. Music is (of course) awesome, and the sound is amazing. EXCEPT, on quiet songs, there is a persistent scratchy sound. This was on the first play, and I've played other vinyl before and after that doesn't exhibit the same characteristic.

What would be your first suggestion as to possible cause - bad copy, bad pressing in general, something in my system that needs to be looked at, other?

Thanks in advance for any help.
kthomas
I don't know the answer but I can attest to similar issues I have had with some new records I have purchased.
Tom Waits Mule Variations is one such example. I am on my second copy due to noisy grooves, and the new copy is just as bad as the first. I have played it on three different turntables with the same noises in the exact same places of the songs, so I am sure it is not equipment related.
Tbromgard's reply might have some truth to it. I had never thought vinyl would need to be broken in, but perhaps it does, depending on the place it was made.
I played my copy last night, side A and B, perfectly quiet and I had the volume turned up. Average db in the high eighties.
Sometimes cleaning a records helps-even brand new records can benefit from a cleaning.
I also own this set and experienced the same problem. The answer to your question is that the vinyl used for the pressing was of poor quality, or the pressing was done on a press with a poor QA. Mine sounds like a used record that had been played with a worn-out stylus. If the vinyl used for pressing is not free of impurities, you will hear it as surface noise. Likewise, if the vinyl pellets are too hot when pressed, the vinyl burns and crystallizes, which results in a noisy record surface. I own quite a few records purchased brand new that sound like repackaged used records. Inferior vinyl and a poor pressing process will kill a good recording.
Unfortunately a lot of Press Plants closed in the 90's and most know how is gone. Now only a few do it, more or less good, but honestly, only a quality shadow from those we got in the 80's++. From my experience, most reissues are horrible from quality, hardly a side which is completely silent. Acoustic Sounds always made a good job, maybe a few others, too, but in general these problems have nothing to do with the Playback System. I think, sooner or later we will find cartridge designers who offer round needles again, because they are not so sensitive. But this is like riding a dead horse...MP3 sound with vinyl