Todays new vinyl LP's better than LP's 40 yrs ago?


Are the new vinyl LPs being produced today better than those produced 40 years ago? When buying a vintage jazz album, will I get as good or better sound quality from today's re-issue copy than the original copy issued 40 years ago?
128x128mitch4t
I find new vinyl just as erratic as old vinyl. Some are great, a lot are mediocre, and some are poor.

If you read about the process of making LPs, there are so many steps involved (and each one is an opportunity for something to go wrong) it is kind of a miracle any LP makes it out of the factory in good shape.

And even if great care is taken during manufacturing, whether new production or old, somebody has to get the LPs from the end of a production run before they replace the stampers.
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Old lps ALWAYS BETTER MORE AIR ETC remember they are cutting these lps fron 40 year old tapes!!
40 years ago was 1970. At that time jazz LPs were generally very good and on average better than pop albums, whether from Impulse, Blue Note, Columbia, Verve, Pacific Jazz, Atlantic, ECM, A&M, CTI, Concord (1972), or Pablo (1973).

In fact, I pretty much consider anything from Concord or ECM to be audiophile quality, and most Pablo is in the same ballpark.

That said, I've also been happy with most reissues, even the $11 Original Jazz Classics reissues. I have a Speakers Corner reissue of "Count Basie and the Kansas City 7" and two Classic Records reissues of "Kind of Blue," and they are all superb. Ditto for the new Diana Krall albums recorded in analog and coming out on vinyl. Big, lush, detailed, musical.

I wouldn't so much say that one era's better than the other so much as that today's masterers and pressers are rapidly regaining the skills we took for granted 40 years ago, and in many cases the limited production numbers mean they are being extra careful these days.

A very few years ago you were hearing horror stories about noisy Classic Records and some of the other label reissues with wrong-sized spindle holes and untrimmed edges (I encountered that). I don't see much of that these days. I have a Speakers Corner reissue of the Bach Cello Suites by Janos Starker on Mercury. I also have an original 1966 mono pressing. The Speakers Corner is at least as good and dead quiet.
>>03-03-10: Mlsstl
I find new vinyl just as erratic as old vinyl. Some are great, a lot are mediocre, and some are poor.<<

Disagree.

Been collecting for over 50 years and find old vinyl far offers far more consistency i.e. higher quality and fewer problems than most of the contemporary overpriced product.

That's not to say that you can't find some very fine releases today because they are available.

But take a random sample of 100 albums from the 50's, 60's, and 70's and compare them to 100 new releases and you'll find far more problems sound quality, warpage, etc. than you'll see/hear in the old stuff.

IMO/YMMV