
jaxvon
Audioholic Ninja
I've done the Wizard of Oz thing...and it really does work. Not really scary, but pretty cool.
I'm sure that was Waters intent. Kind of Orwellian in that regard.RGCriss said:I have always liked "Animals". Maybe I'm crazy but I see alot of society in this album especially in the lyrics to the tune "Dogs" Just my two-cents worth![]()
The engineering by Parsons is what all other engineering should be judged by IMO.Shadow_Ferret said:I voted for Dark Side of the Moon. Great songs made even greater by perfection in engineering by Alan Parsons. There is a reason that thing set the record for being on the charts for eternity.
Although songwise I think I like Meddle just a little bit more.
Couldn't agree more nibhaz, though Elliot Scheiner is certainly making his mark on the hi-res surround disc scene.nibhaz said:The engineering by Parsons is what all other engineering should be judged by IMO.
Hillbill, I found this:hillbill said:Any of you Floyd fans know if Pulse is ever going to be released on DVD?
I don't understand these things at all. How can they reengineer something that was already engineered? Aren't these things already on tape or something and all they do is press it into the new format?Hawkeye said:Sad that Parsons was not asked to mix the SACD release of DSOTM. [/url]
Not to worry, there is only one master tape. I believe DSOTM was originally recorded on a 16 track tape machine back in 1973 with Alan Parsons at the controls. He then down-mixed the master to two tracks (stereo), and that is what we all listened to for years. A couple years ago James Guthrie took the 16 track master tape and down-mixed it to 6 tracks (5.1 SACD). He had the flexibility to put the guitars where he wanted, same with the vocals, the drums, etc. He was able to fade/pan, echo, isolate, change the volume of a particular track (and hence instruments, vocals, etc.), according to how he thought it should be. Unfortunately, at least IMO, some of it was not true to the original recording ie: placement of the heartbeat, the vocal/echo "...that's what the fighting's all about..about...about.." instead of "...that's what the fighting's all about...bout..bout..." as mentioned in the link above. Whether intentional or not, several of the subtle nuances from Parsons' vision have been overlooked on the Guthrie mix. Part of what makes DSOTM so special are the recording techniques of a meticulous engineer (Parsons). For instance, it was Parsons' who brought a tape recorder to a London clock shop and recorded the clocks leading into the song "Time"Shadow_Ferret said:I don't understand these things at all. How can they reengineer something that was already engineered? Aren't these things already on tape or something and all they do is press it into the new format?
I've been looking forward to getting DSOM on SACD, but if it isn't the same as the vinyl album I have, what's the use?
Zipper, DSOTM was originally released in stereo. Then a few years later the record company asked Parsons to re-visit it and produce a quad recording from the 16 track master, which was then released on 4 channel vinyl. The technology, perhaps a bit ahead of its time, never really made a huge splash.zipper said:DSOTM, although I too would choose WYWH.
Wasn't DSOTM an attempt at quadrophonic sound recording? I thought I remember that being mentioned years ago. If so, converting it from a 16-track recording to SACD or DVD-A would seem to give it an edge up on most old albums.
AP's "Tales of mystery & imagination" is an interesting mix of classical & rock music that some may find to their liking.
SF, if the tape were mono, or one track, you could not separate anything. But the tape, in this case, has 16 different and unique tracks. Think of it this way...a stereo cassette tape has 2 distinct tracks, or channels: right and left. If you were to hook up a cassette deck's audio L & R outputs to a digital mixer, you then would have complete control over each of the two tracks in the digital domain. Now take the 16 track tape machine and hook up the 16 outputs to a digital mixer and you have control of the 16 tracks. In the analog world Parsons recorded DSOTM in it took considerable time looping tapes to create all the audio effects. This can now be done quite quickly digitally.Shadow_Ferret said:Hmm. I really need to learn how music is made. I cannot fathom how they can separate out the instruments once they've all been laid down on the tape. At that point don't they all overlap each other and it's just one musical component?
And Tales of Mystery and Imagination is an excellent album. I'd love to get that in SACD. The beginning guitar in "The Raven" swoops between speakers in the stereo mode, I'd love to hear that swirl around in surround.![]()