"Bridge Over Trouble Water" sounds artificial


During the pandemic I've been upgrading my sound system.  I used to enjoy Simon & Garfunkel, "Bridge Over Trouble Water".  With my upgraded equipment the hi resolution audio sounds very synthetic, with one track on top of another, not like real music at all.  The voices are doubled and violins just layered on top.  On my same system, I played a live concert of Andre Previn playing Gershwin's "Rhapsody in Blue".  It sounded real and beautiful, like a live performance.  Am I doing something wrong?
aeschwartz
When you put down the sound of BOTW you are denigrating the work of this man, Roy Halee.  He knows more about what sounds good than you do.
I linked to the Roy Halee interview.  He says that he banged on a garbage can with a microphone inside when recording "Summer in the City" by the Lovin' Spoonful.  Sorry, to me that is not music.
The Mobile Fidelity Ultradisc One step Bridge sound quite good unlike the Greatest Hits vinyl and cd version and all of the  other cd versions that I have including the  2011 remaster.
Obviously Mr Garfunkel couldn't take those high notes in the end so he needed some help which screwed up the recording a bit (done better today). The same with Mr Mercury. But he had Mr Taylor to help him out. Whats the problem? Still a very enjoyable and interesting recording. You can clearly follow what they did in the studio. Thanks to high-res. 
Yes, that's an unwelcome (and unexpected) result of having a highly (or even just modestly) resolving system.  Sometimes it reveals some hidden gems of detail that you never paid attention to before, but it also can shine a spotlight on the warts.  I find myself seeking out good sounding recordings from artists that I would've never listened to in my youth, and find myself stopping familiar albums halfway through because they are not pleasurable to listen to.  Examples: I listened to Heart's "Magic Man" from the Dreamboat Annie album the other day, and thought to myself halfway through when the synthesizer kicks in, "Boy, that's a cheesy sounding synth".  Black Sabbath's Paranoid album, "Hand of Doom" has some cymbal bell taps at the beginning, and the drummer was out of time with those - never noticed that before.