From the Steve Hoffman Music Forums thread:
NorthNY Mark said: ↑Listened to the first side of Nigeria last night (without having seen the last few pages of comments until now). I was struck by a number of things, especially on the second track. Number one: this performance blows the roof off the freaking house! Man, these guys were on fire at this session! Number two: The sound is unfortunately riddled with overload distortion, not just from Blakey, but from Green as well. Reading comments about non-fill, I would almost have wondered if some might not be mistaking the overload distortion for surface flaws, except that one commenter got a pristine replacement. I also wonder whether this overload distortion may have been the reason the release was shelved for many years, because it certainly isn't due to any lack of conviction in the performances. Number three: Aside from the distortion that I assume is on the master tape, the sonics are great, with dynamics that make you feel like these guys are playing in your room (and, as I wrote before, threatening to blow the roof right off).
Man, you sort of mirrored what I was going to write here. This is an amazing album, particularly
It Ain't Necessarily So. This may be the best single cut of Grant Green's career, and perhaps his best solo. If I wanted to give an example of what Green does best, I'd play this cut. And yes, the exhortation from Blakey is great to hear.
The Complete Quartets of Grant Green w/Sonny Clark 2CD set sounds really good. And they have tamed a bit of that distortion on the CD set. On this LP, the transients and dynamics are untamed. You much more greatly feel the pluck of each note of the guitar, yet hear the slightly greater nuance of the individual notes of the phrasing. Blakey's drums have even greater impact.
But the sizzle of the cymbals and even sometimes Green's guitar overdrive the LP. And some have mentioned the cymbals on the MM 33 of
Maiden Voyage vs the 45. They have cited that the cymbals on the 45 sound more rounded, more relaxed, less bright and harsh, more natural. I'm wondering if doing this at 45 would help, or at the very least, cut this lower on the SRX vinyl.
My copy is otherwise virtually perfect. No warble that I could detect, no ticks or pops, and pretty quiet vinyl. And overall, a great album.