Whats on your turntable tonight?


For me its the first or very early LP's of:
Allman Brothers - "Allman Joys" "Idyllwild South"
Santana - "Santana" 200 g reissue
Emerson Lake and Palmer - "Emerson Lake and Palmer"
and,
Beethoven - "Piano Concerto No. 4 in G Major" Rudolph Serkin/Ozawa/BSO
slipknot1
Some friends over today. The feast:
Crosby, Stills and Nash - CSN "Helplessly Hoping"
Donald Fagan - The Nightfly "Walk Between Raindrops"
Allman brothers Band - Fillmore East "You Don't Love Me"
Louis Armstrong - Satchmo Plays King Oliver "St. James Infirmary"
Eva Cassidy - Songbird "Fields of Gold"
Joni Mitchell - Hejira "Coyote"
Dead Can Dance - Into the Labyrinth "Yulunga"
Patricia Barber - Modern Cool "Constantinople"
Stravinsky - "Firebird" Dorati/LSO
So far today:
Rickie Lee Jones: "Rickie Lee Jones"
Rickie Lee Jones: "Pirates" (thanks Sbank !!)
Sonny Rollins: "Way Out West", Analogue Productions 45 rpm reissue
"Die Rohre - The Tube, A Baroque Delight for the Ears" Tacet L74 (all tube recording and mastering chain, delightful Baroque music in every good sound)
Itzhak Perlman & Pinchas Zukerman: "Duets for 2 Violins" - a surprisingly good Angel pressing (S-37406) of this 1977 collaboration.
Ray Brown Trio, "Soular Energy" Pure Audiophile PA-002
Bill Berry, "Shortcake" Pure Audiophile PA-004
(again!)
Whatever Stan Ricker is doing with his revised half-speed mastering process on these Pure Audiophile LPs, the results are simply stunning. I just had to come back to these LPs again tonight both for the superb musicianship and to wallow in the incredible sonics! The inner detail, leading edge transient response and dynamics on these LPs are very special.
.
Billy Joel - Innocent Man:

Just picked this one up for $1.50 in perfect shape a few weeks ago. Never realized how good some of the Billy Joel albums are. This one is quickly becoming one of my favorite Billy Joel albums.
Today I installed the 1" Cellular shades as called for by Rives Audio http://www.rivesaudio.com They are insulating room darkening shades. So, I played the standard large orchestral warhorses:
Mussorgsky "Pictures At An Exhibition" (RCA LSC-2201/Classic Records reissue)
Stravinsky "Firebird complete ballet" (Mercury SR90226/Classic Records reissue)
Mendelssohn "Symphony No. 3, Fingal's Cave" (Decca SXL 2246/Speaker's Corner 45 rpm reissue
Miles Davis "Kind of Blue" (Columbia CS 8163/Classic Records 45 rpm reissue)

As good as things have been sounding, the window treatments have taken it to a whole new level. All the residual glare from the 6ft and 10 ft windows is gone compliments of the 1" insulated cellular shades.
Today:
John Coltrane & Johnny Hartman, Impulse AS-40, Speakers Corner reissue (from the analogue master tapes)

Fleetwood Mac: Fleetwood Mac

Wild Child Butler, Analogue Productions Original recording, d-to-d. If you like blues and you haven't listened to the APO releases, you are missing some wonderful performances in great sound!

Pettersson, Sym 8, Commissiona/BaltimoreSO, DGG 2531 176. Great music, excellent performance, fanastic recording - this is NOT the typical DGG sound. Recorded under the direction of Robert Wood (Telarc), this recording has a natural soundstage, extended frequency response, very good dynamic range and no obvious mult-miking.

Stravinsky Violin Concerto, Perlman and Ozawa/BSO, DGG. Very nice performance by a young feisty Perlman. Unfortunately, typcial DGG multi-mike mess for sound.

Berg Violin Concerto - wonderful work for lovers of great 20th Century music. From the same LP above.
.
Ray,

VPI offers the advantage of a platter that fully supports the LP and is sturdy enough to use as a platform for "scrubbing" the surface of the LP using your preferred cleaning fluid and brush (e.g., Disc Doctor or Records Research).

I've used a VPI Model 17 pretty intensively for 18 years, and it still runs like a champ; they are very sturdily built. Either the VPI 16.5 or the 17 would be a great addition.

OTOH, the manual cleaning process with Disc Doctor works pretty well without a vacuum cleaner. The vacuum cleaner adds a lot of convenience, but a more important key to excellent cleaning of your vinyl is using a good cleaning fluid and and good brushes, like the Disc Doctor. I say this after having been a dedicated user of home brew cleaning solutions with my VPI for many years, and being a DD skeptic. NO MORE! After an experience at Lloyd Walker's house, where he took one of my "clean" records, plopped it on top of his VPI 17 and cleaned it with Disc Doctor fluid using a DD brush, the improvement in clarity was so immediately apparent that I become a convert on the spot and have never looked back.
.
i just bought 180 lps from an elderly woman for 25$ who just wanted to get them out of the house,sinatra ,tony bennett,anne murrey,johnny cash,classical,country,louis prima@kelly smith,ella,some really good stuff!now i need to buy a record cleaner,,,nitty gritty or vpi?
An afternoon of music with friends; what a treat!

Ray Brown Trio: Soular Energy (Pure Audiophile)
Laudate II (Proprius)
Menotti: Violin Concerto (Reference Recordings)
Rochberg: String Quartet No 3 (Nonesuch)
Shostakovich: String Quartet No. 8, Borodin Qt (Decca)
Shostakovich: Sym 5, Previn/LSO (EMI)
Holly Cole: Romantically Helpless/One Trick Pony (Grooveland)
Supertramp: Crime of the Century/School

All analogue, all vinyl, all great music to share.
.
I just finished listening to "Trouble Man" (Tamla T322L). This Marvin Gaye's outstanding soundtrack to the most forgettable movie of the same title.

Maybe it's just my mood, but this is in the top 1% of all my albums. Just a wandering, fabulously inspired performance with an inexplicable ending. Actually parallels his life, I guess.
Some more digital discs tonight.

Johnny Nash; The Reggae Collection (very highly recommended)
Black Uhuru; Reggae Greats
B.B. King; Lucille (title track only)
Sam Cooke; The Man and His Music
Rushton,

Another Judy Mowatt title to try is "Working Wonders". This is actually my favorite Judy Mowatt album. And again, a title I would like to hear on your Walker TT.
Wow, another LP I need to pull off the shelf and play. Haven't listened to The Wall in years, and the system has changed dramatically over that time... Thanks for the reminder!
Pink Floyd's The Wall, 30th Anniversary Edition. I just picked it up today. On a side note the guy at the store said a Metallica box set is coming out soon on vinyl...sweet!
Thanks for the offer Rushton, I will definitely look you up sometime. Never been to Philadelphia before, but it is a place I have always wanted to visit.

One note about my recommendations; the Black Uhuru title is pretty funky. It is also pretty spectacular from a sonic point of view.
Wellfed - Thank you, I've added the Judy Mowartt and Black Uhuru to my browsing list. It's wonderful to be with group of folks who are willing to help introduce each other to new music!

If you're ever in the Philadelphia area, I'd be delighted to have you come by to listen.
Rushton,

Two Reggae titles for you

Judy Mowatt - Black Woman
Black Uhuru - Dub Factor, The

I would love to hear what your table might bring out of the Black Uhuru disc. If you like Black Woman, you would probably like all of Judy Mowatt's titles. I do. If you don't like Black Woman, you might still like some of her other titles.

Neither of the above titles are representative of classic Reggae IMO.

Two that are

Bob Marley - Natty Dread
Bunny Wailer - Bunny Wailer Sings the Wailers
Tonight:
Grateful Dead "Live Dead" (Warner Bros. "green lable" R1 74395/180g reissue)
Eva Cassidy - "Songbird" (S&P-501)
Tangerine Dream -"Green Desert" (Relativity 88561-8072)
Last night it was Mahler's 9th George Solti conducting the London Symphony.
No music tonight, but, we watched a great movie from Canada called "Rare Birds". Filmed on location in Newfoundland about a little restaurant that is failing. Stars William Hurt. Quirky and very good.
Nothing since I am redoing my room treatment. The walls are bare now, so no fun to listen until I'm done.

But I just wanted to comment on what a great thread this is.

Thanks Slipknot1!
Rush,
Another to add to any short list of Reggae Classics should also include the soundtrack to the the film "The Harder They Come", which is often filed under Jimmy Cliff. Although it features many artists such as Toots and the Maytals, Jimmy usually gets the credit.
Cheers,
Spencer
Life beyond audio this past week: Olympics coverage is taking precedence for my discretionary time! Some incredible stories happening throughout the competitions.

Glad to hear you like the Doc Watson and Mendelssohn LPs, Joe. They are awfully nice! I still need to get Doc Watson's "Southbound" and the two Cisco reissues of the Joan Baez LPs. Aaggh, my wish list at Red Trumpet is getting longer again.
.
Doc Watson "Home Again!" (Vagauard VSD-79239/Cisco reissue)
Don't miss this one folks. Incredible, clean, pure recording.

Mendelssohn "Mendelssohn in Scotland Symphony No. 3, Fingal's Cave" Maag/LSO (Decca SXL 2246/Speaker's Corner 45 rpm reissue)
Another great one. This recording is demonstration quality.
Have the day off, everyone is out of the house (even the dogs). So, we have:
Art Pepper "Meets The Rhythm Section" (Contemporary S7532)
Rhythm Devils (Hart/Kreutzmann) "Rhythm Devils Play River Music" (Passport PB 9844)
Emerson, Lake and Palmer "Trilogy" (Atlantic P-10113A)
ELP "Welcome Back My Friends To The Show That Never Ends" (Manticore MC 3-200)
Shostakovich "Symphony No. 12 "1917"" (Melodiya/Angel SR-40128)
So far:
Tchaikovsky "Romeo and Juliet Overture and Fantasy" Dorati/LSO (Mercury SR90209)
Bach "Brandenburg Concertos 4,5,6" von Karajan/Berlin Philharmonic (Deutsche Grammophon 2531 333)
Hello Rushton:

Your question is very hard on my brain.

I had to go through my Reggae section to give you an answer.

If I were to buy only two reggae albums, I would buy
1)"Bob Marley and the Wailers Live!" 1975 Island Records ILPS 9376.
2)Third World "You've Got the Power", Columbia FC3774

"Legend" as described by Slipknot, is a fine compilation of Marley's work. I prefer "Live" because I am partial to recordings of live performances, and I prefer the slightert faster tempo at which the songs are played on "Live".

Third World gets a nod, because while the entire album is good, "Try Jah Love" (Side One Track One-written by Stevie Wonder) is an ultimate test of one's groovenosity/life force quotient. If you don't dance or at least get your head bobbing when this track is played at a good volume, you are likely in a coma.

However, don't obsess over the choices. Your approach, IMO is unimpeachable-buy two, play them to death and get them inside you. Then buy just one more/Repeat process.

I have to go blast Third World now.

Happy Listening.

Michael
Rush,
If you don't my chiming in here, I really enjoy Bob Marley and the Wailers "Rastaman Vibration" (Island PS 8383)
If you like compilation LPs, "Legend: The best of Bob Marley and the Wailers" (Island A1 90169). This one is nice as it contains some of the Wailers' most recognizable songs: "Jamming", Exodus", "Get Up, Stand Up", "No Woman, No Cry", etc.
Mknowles, if I were to buy two Reggae records (a genre about which I know nothing), would you recommend "Exodus" as one of the two? And what else?
.
Tonight, some Reggae.

1. Soundtrack from the movie "The Harder They Come" on Mango Records, Distributed by Island Records. Featuring young Jimmy Cliff, other listed artists are "Maytals", "Melodians", and "Slickers". Snippets of the film plays in my mind's eye every time I hear this album.

2. Exodus- Bob Marley and the Wailers. Good old warhorse sounds fresh still.
Joe, great news about the results from the VPI Scout/Scoutmaster upgrade! Glad to hear it. What Harry Weisfeld is able to accomplish is pretty amazing.
I am very pleased with the results I am getting from this temporary Denon cart! it is quite musical. It allows me to hear just how good the new turntable is. After only a few LP's, I can say that it is blacker, quieter and has really dropped the noise floor over the Scout. The music leaps out at you from the silence. It's so quiet that I don't realize how high the gain is as the lead-in grooves are so silent - then, boom... Who would have thought an old medium output DL300 still had so much life left? I shudder to think what a new upper end cartridge is going to do.
Ah..., the Starker/Bach reissue is indeed remarkable. Glad you've had a chance to listen to it, Joe!

These Speakers Corner Mercury classical reissues are incredibly good; they are doing a great job. I've just seen a preview of what's coming up in the next year (posted on the Phonogram list), and it's luscious. I know where my spending budget will be going. ;^)
.
Bach - "Suites For Unaccompanied Cello Complete" Janos Starker (Mercury SR3-9016) This reissue has got to be one of the finest available. If you don't have it, get it. It is truly remarkable.
Funny you should mention that! Played old, scratchy versions of Dumbo and Aristocats for my daughter the other night. Finished things off with "Ella and Louis"; her choice!
I bet this one was not on anyone elses list. I bought a stack on used LPs a few weeks ago and have been working my way through them.

Last night I listened to three LPs the most fun was a Disney "Three Little Pigs" narrated by Sterling Halloway! It was actually a lot of fun.

The other two were a brit named 'Tracie' and someone named Tuesday Knight.
Playin' the blues tonight...

Lightin' Hopkins and Sonny Terry, "Last Night Blues" Prestige/Bluesville 1029, Analogue Productions 45 rpm reissue (another superb reissue from the masterful hands of Hoffman and Gray at AcousTech, and the guitar/harmonica playing are not not half bad either! Seriously, Sonny Terry is just incredible on the mouth harp; what a combination.)

John Lee Hooker, "Sings the Blues (That’s my story)" Riverside OBC-538, Analogue Productions reissue.

Wild Child Butler, "Sho' 'Nuff" Analogue Productions Original APO 2015 - 45 rpm (About as "live" in your listening room as it gets.)
.