After reading all the above posts I had my family (6 of us ranging in age from 11-49) listen to portions of some older Springsteen CDs, including BTR, and compare them to Wrecking Ball. The system we listened through is a Linn Unidisk 1.1/NAD C375BEE/PSB Imagine T/REL-R328 kit. The decision was unanimous. Wrecking Ball is a much more enjoyable listening experience. You don't have to be an "audiophile" to hear the great contrast. BTR is a muddy recording, and being a long time Springsteen fan I accept the statement above that Springsteen intended it to be so....However, playing Wrecking Ball immediately after BTR makes me wish that the clarity found on the latest recording was present on BTR. Having said that, I'll still listen to BTR and other Springsteen recordings over and over because I don't know a singer/songwriter that captures the ecstasy, agony, pain, pride and ethos of working class America better than Bruce Springsteen.
Born to Run: Why the Poor Sound Quality?
I have always been disappointed with the sound quality of Bruce Springsteen's Born to Run. Even the CBS 1/2 Speed Master pressing is underwhelming. Is there a good explanation for this? As I recall, Jon Landau produced the album, and he is certainly no slouch, but the recording seems inferior.
It's really a shame that there doesn't seem to be a decent pressing of this classic album
It's really a shame that there doesn't seem to be a decent pressing of this classic album
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- 36 posts total
- 36 posts total