To add to the topic idea proposed by ronkent, in no particular order:
- "Brothers In Arms" Dire Straits (Mobile Fidelity, 180g, 45 rpm)
- "The Trinity Session" Cowboy Junkies (Analogue Productions, 200g, 33 rpm)
- "The Joshua Tree" U2 (Quality Record Pressings,180g, 33 rpm)
- "Time Out" Dave Brubeck Quartet (Analogue Productions, 200g, 45 rpm)
- "Blade Runner Soundtrack" Vangelis (Audio Fidelity, 180g, red vinyl)
These albums are what I use most when critical listening is needed, but I can get away by using two more than anything else. First, I use "Brothers In Arms" as my rock reference: "Money for Nothing" is an especially great track because of that explosive drum opening & Knopfler's searing guitar solo. The whole album is simply tremendous sounding, both musically & in an engineering sense.
"The Trinity Session" by the Cowboy Junkies is the second one. The entire album was recorded at Toronto's Church of the Holy Trinity using a single microphone, so the feeling you get is very intimate & raw...you can hear every little breath, fingering on fret boards, foot taps, etc. The recording is so revealing. But, most of all, it's Margo Timmins' haunting vocals that make this a reference album. If the female voice is the most difficult instrument to record & reproduce well, this album will show you what your system's capable of. I love this record...
Looking forward to what others have to share!
Arvin