Mr Peabody
Well-known member
- Thread Author
- #1
I realize remastering can be of benefit in some cases but I find often it is not, especially compared to the original. Or, what I think to be the original.
What prompted this, I saw a "remaster" of Tom Petty, Damn The Torpedos, I wanted to listen to it anyway and was excited to see the remaster. I've owned the LP since high school when it first came out and have since purchased a Greatest Hits on CD, so really familiar with the album.
On first listen it just didn't sound right to me, so I compared it to the older offering. By comparison the remaster was louder, less space between instruments, sounds were bolder but it was like detailed had been squeezed out. Is this due to compression being used? The older version seemed a bit thinner but detail was better and sounded more natural, the snare sounded more like a snare, etc. The organ even sounded better although it wasn't pushed up into the mix so much like the remaster.
This was via Tidal I compared the remaster and older version, I didn't feel playing the LP or CD wound be apples to apples.
I find myself often times preferring the original. For instance, the Jimmy Page remaster of the LZ catalog, I do like the remaster, it seems things are punched up a bit but on the original it seems like strings have more textural detail. Probably not the best example since I do still like the remaster.
A better example, a friend was torturing me with ELO's Mr. Blue Sky, we started with the original then he found a remaster. He said, "that was better wasn't it?", he was surprised when I said, no. Pretty much the same as I described with the Tom Petty, the ELO remaster sounded bolder but the detail and textural info had been squeezed out somehow.
So anyone hear things like me or digging the remasters?
What prompted this, I saw a "remaster" of Tom Petty, Damn The Torpedos, I wanted to listen to it anyway and was excited to see the remaster. I've owned the LP since high school when it first came out and have since purchased a Greatest Hits on CD, so really familiar with the album.
On first listen it just didn't sound right to me, so I compared it to the older offering. By comparison the remaster was louder, less space between instruments, sounds were bolder but it was like detailed had been squeezed out. Is this due to compression being used? The older version seemed a bit thinner but detail was better and sounded more natural, the snare sounded more like a snare, etc. The organ even sounded better although it wasn't pushed up into the mix so much like the remaster.
This was via Tidal I compared the remaster and older version, I didn't feel playing the LP or CD wound be apples to apples.
I find myself often times preferring the original. For instance, the Jimmy Page remaster of the LZ catalog, I do like the remaster, it seems things are punched up a bit but on the original it seems like strings have more textural detail. Probably not the best example since I do still like the remaster.
A better example, a friend was torturing me with ELO's Mr. Blue Sky, we started with the original then he found a remaster. He said, "that was better wasn't it?", he was surprised when I said, no. Pretty much the same as I described with the Tom Petty, the ELO remaster sounded bolder but the detail and textural info had been squeezed out somehow.
So anyone hear things like me or digging the remasters?