None of the other albums had the same level of thinness and tininess as the diana Krall album but they all seemed light on bass compared to listening to CDs on the same system.In addition to the possibility that Minkwelder suggested, these symptoms could be caused by a polarity reversal on one (and only one) channel. In other words, if the white and blue cartridge connections are interchanged, OR if the red and green connections are interchanged.
One odd thing i noticed on the Diana Krall album was that my tonearm kept wanting to come off the album at the start rather than grab a groove and work inwards. not a problem i have experienced with the other 6 albums I have been playing.Try reducing the anti-skating force, especially if when you view the cartridge from the front while the stylus is in the groove of a ROTATING record the cantilever is visibly deflected to the left, relative to the approximately straight-ahead position it probably assumes when the stylus is lifted off of the record. Try to set the anti-skating force such that there is no visible left or right deflection of the cantilever when the stylus is in the groove of a rotating record, relative to its position when the stylus is lifted off of the record. I think that your turntable may only provide 3 choices for the anti-skating setting; if so choose whichever setting minimizes that deflection of the cantilever. If the resulting setting conflicts with the one recommended in the turntable manual for the tracking force that is being used, ignore the manual’s recommendation.
Regards,
-- Al