Why recordings made before 1965 sound better.


 

I’ve brought ht up this topic before, and I believe my point was misunderstood. so, I’m trying again.

Many A’goners have commented that recordings originating in the late 50’s and early 60’s which have been transferred to CDs sound particularly open with better soundstaging than those produced later.
Ray Dolby invented his noise reduction system in 1965 to eliminate what was considered annoying tape hiss transferred to records of the time. The principle was to manipulate the tonal structure so as to reduce this external noise:

“The Dolby B consumer noise-reduction system works by compressing and increasing the volume of low-level high-frequency sounds during recording and correspondingly reversing the process during playback. This high-frequency round turn reduces the audible level of tape hiss.”

‘Dolby A and C work similarly.

I maintain that recordings made prior to 1965 without Dolby sound freer and more open because the original tonal structure has not been altered and manipulated.

128x128rvpiano

Because I believe the other factors (except for mini miking) don’t have as much to do with openness and sound staging.

A major component of sonic enjoyment.

@rvpiano 

Openness was the major quality I looked for in a system up all the way up til my 30s.

One wonderful discovery was finding out that tape decks usually had an adjustable screw which enabled you to fine tune the azimuth.

In my experience most needed adjusting, and I used to wonder how many people were listening to cassette decks which had less than optimal tracking.

Somehow, I gradually discovered that Naim amps 1980s/1990s) weren't renowned for tone and timbre and these qualities became more important than even openness and brightness.

I can't prove it but I tend to feel that the change from the old tube mixing desks to transistor may have been a gain for resolution but it was also a loss for timbre.

I'm guessing also that most of the Beatles albums were mixed on tube powered desks and most if not all of their solo work on transistor ones.

Swings and roundabouts, as usual.

 

Cd318,

I absolutely agree with you about the timbre change from tubes to solid state.

I always found the difference in sound character between Rubber Soul (1965) and Revolver (1966) dramatic---very, very different. I later read that Abbey Road switched from tubes to transistors between the recording of those two LP’s. Who knows if it’s true.

Revolver contains many more tracks than does Rubber Soul, accomplished by more "bouncing" of finished tracks onto one channel of a second 4-track recorder. That can definitely affect the sound quality of the 2-track mixdown tape and resulting LP’s and CD’s.

To further muddy the waters, The Beatles at the same time switched from Vox amps and Gretsch and Rickenbacker guitars to Fender amps and Epiphone Casino guitars. It is also rumoured that Ringo switched from calfskin to plastic heads at the same time, but I think that is probably myth. What I do know is that his drums on Rubber Soul sound much better than those on Revolver. IMO, anyway.