@carlsbad2 After reading your post, I had no choice, but to listen to Gene Ammons - Boss tenor LP. He is one of my favorites. Recording engineer for this Blue Note LP was Rudy Van Gelder. Link you posted says the first three tracks were remastered by Rudy. What does this means? I assume that streaming uses three tracks remastered by Rudy. But the original CD tracks contain only the album version. Let me know if my understanding is correct or not.
In many way I am glad 90% of my jazz collection is in vinyl. I spent a fortune chasing albums from my favorite artists and it was money well spent. While listening to Boss Tenor, I noticed imaging and layering (depth) in this album was excellent. Gene Ammons was on left side with congo drums placed just behind him (almost outside of my left speaker). Double bass was placed between left and center (more towards center) and Tommy Flannigan's piano placed between center and right, but in the second row. The drums were located in the third row from center to far left.
I continued with Dave Brubeck's Time Further Out (Columbia) and finished the session with John Lewis playing J.S. Bach's Preludes and Fugues from The Well-Tempered Clavier Book 1 (Phillips). If you haven't,. give a try to John Lewis album. It has a jazz flavor even though a classical album.
Anyway, thank for get me going this evening.