50 of the best hi-fi albums for audiophiles


This popped up in my Facebook feed feed so I bit.  
It's not a bad list.  I have more than 20 of these titles and agree they are excellent sounding.
https://www.whathifi.com/features/50-albums-audiophiles?utm_content=bufferf2d32&utm_medium=socia...

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I am surprised by the list. There is quite a bit of music that I like, but audio quality in analogue recordings from the sixties?
I had expected the usual list of audiophile warhorses, many with good sonics, but so-so music, or material so well-trod that it is hardly a revelation. The inclusion of The Congos, Heart of the Congo, is cool. It isn't a sonic masterpiece in the audiophile sense, but it is a trip to listen to; Lee Perry cobbled it together using some of the top players in Jamaica, using a TEAC 4 track deck - 2340 o4 3340?-- bouncing tracks to get more space to overdub. The whole thing is a marvel of sound, but it isn't purist stuff- if anything, it is a wacky, wonderful exploration of the art of dubbing and Jamaican roots reggae.  (PS: if you want to buy this record, there is only one I've heard that sounds decent- it is the OOP Blood & Fire copy. The short-lived Simply Vinyl reissue of same sounds flat and dead).  
I am NOT associated with the article. I merely cut and pasted the introduction to the article as it appeared on-line - ncluding "definitive" in italics. The introduction (or premise) to this or any similar article is important in order to put the list in context. It is much more informative than the title.
Good info, whart. I have used the Teac 2340 (just like the 3340, but with 7" reel capacity to the 3340’s 10-1/2") in a small studio I built and engineered in, and it is a good sounding recorder, almost as good as my Revox A-77, believe it or not. Nicely transparent, low noise, and full bandwidth.
Should have been called “A random list of 50 albums we like, that weren’t brickwalled into oblivion”