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STELLAR RECORDINGS

This may be the best sounding disc I own....


b89b225b9da0130e7667f010.L.jpg

Discovered Again! Plus -- XRCD24

Dave Grusin

1976/2004 Sheffield Lab/LIM Records

David Grusin gets discovered more often than any musician I know. People have the feeling he gets left out, "the least appreciated film score composer,' and so forth. He has been struggling along at the very top of the music business for years.

Lincoln Mayorga, co-founder of Sheffield Records, has wanted to make a direct-to-disc album with Grusin for many years, and Grusin became intrigued with the challenge. Finally the idea and the occasion met. Direct-to-disc recording implies spontaneity. One performs live. The stylus hits the lacquer, cuts a continuous groove starting at Note 1, Side 1. It will not terminate until the last note of Side 1, and then 2. In this sense it is a live performance. Yet, the music must be painstakingly rehearsed so that the engineer can cope with the heroic task of mixing as he records. For it is an engineer’s medium. This puts aching pressure on the musicians trying to stay in touch with their own impulses. What the engineer must program, the musicians must de-program as they go. Somewhere in this minefield an unusual quality of music emerges. It is never child’s play. For this extraordinary task, Grusin hired a special group of musicians. They are also the same guys Grusin hires for most of his work. They’re up to it and they suit him. One, bassist Ron Carter, was an import.

Anyone who knows jazz knows Ron Carter. The sound he can get from an acoustic bass (full sized, not three-quarter) is like nobody else’s sound. It is particularly satisfying to hear the depth with which that sound is caught within the direct-to-disc recording medium.

The guitar player is Lee Ritenour, who is too young to play as well as he does, but Grusin lets him get away with it. Indeed, it would be hard to stop him. It is difficult to pin down the reasons for rapport between musicians at their work. Grusin and Ritenour generate a similar momentum; they’re both fast, disreputable, and great little dancers.

Drummer Harvey Mason is a staple of your basic Dave Grusin rhythm section. His agility is seemingly effortless. I’ve seen him sight-read complicated time signatures while I was still trying to hear them in my head. He also has a silly streak that’s hard to resist. Most important in this case, he keeps the time where Grusin likes to hear it, while painting on colors of his own. And if this were not enough, he often brings a shopping bag full of homemade popcorn to the dates.

Larry Bunker is the formidable vibraharpist and percussionist on the album. You should be so lucky as to be in any kind of trouble on a record session and have Larry Bunker there, imperturbably drinking his black coffee, waiting, ready to bail you out. Rarely have I known a more contained musician, nor a more various and capable one. Bunker is what the word veteran is for.

Instead of improving the software technology like other formats do, JVC has chosen to do some serious homework on the hardware side. Developed from its well-known K2 20-bit proprietary digital processor, engineers at JVC Mastering Center spared no effort in refining and extending the K2 system into a K2 24-bit configuration. The most remarkable breakthrough is the application of a unique timing system called "Rubidium RF Distribution" technology. Instead of using crystal as the medium for laser clocking, they implemented a timing system based on rubidium, a rare material that is used for space applications. This device is 10,000 times more accurate than conventional crystal clocks. (Detailed information of this system will be found elsewhere in the liner notes.) In a nutshell, XRCD24 produces the finest analog sound: warm, musical and dynamic, but in a normal 16-bit PCM digital format, meaning the disc is playable by any CD player without any additional equipment or different player!

Selections:
1. A Child is Born
2. Keep Your Eye on the Sparrow
3. Sun Song
4. Captain Bacardi
Three Cowboy Songs:
5. Git Along Little Dogies
6. The Colorado Trail
7. Cripple Creek Breakdown
8. Adeus A Papai
Previously unreleased alternative performances:
9. Keep Your Eyes On The Sparrow (theme from Barreta)
10. Sun Song
11. Git Along Little Dogies
12. The Colorado Trail

Musicians: Dave Grusin, vocals & piano; Ron Carter, bass; Lee Ritenour, guitar; Harvey Mason, drums; Larry Bunker, percussion.
 
^^^ I have that one, the original pressing on vinyl (from a direct-to-disk master cutting).
 
Wow, a pricey CD... ($30) - but I trust you Dennie - ordered!
 
Dennie said:
This may be the best sounding disc I own....


b89b225b9da0130e7667f010.L.jpg

Discovered Again! Plus -- XRCD24

Dave Grusin

Listening to this now, and yeah it's good. Has a very intimate, clear recording style, especially in the little cymbal/high hat ticks and such in the HF, really crystal clear. And the (acoustic) bass is particularly "present" as well.

Dennie, this brings to mind a few others that I also consider great, sorta vaguely, generally similar styles (well to me anyway, or at least similar RECORDING styles, to my ear), and recordings that struck me:

Grand-Piano-Canyon.jpg



MI0000164614.jpg



2442913.jpg
 
PaulyT said:
Listening to this now, and yeah it's good. Has a very intimate, clear recording style, especially in the little cymbal/high hat ticks and such in the HF, really crystal clear.

A lot of these "smoove jazz" recordings feature a lot of triangle playing (yeah, the same triangle you played in "tah tah teetee tah" 1st-grade music class). Given its ubiquitous use, I'm surprised that, over the years, I've never read an article about using them, technique (and yes, there can be some intricate muting while being played), recording, and arranging.
And I just realized, despite my love of percussion toys, I don't even have one. :shock:
 
At the risk of Zing banninating me,

0030916a_medium.jpeg


Just got the Steve Wilson-mixed 5.1 Bluray yesterday, and this thing sounds gorgeous! I normally don't get into 2 guitar/bass/drums bands, but each guitarist has an incredibly unique style (one plays very much like early-Talking Heads' David Byrne, very quirkily rhythmic). Produced by Steve Lillywhite and engineered by Hugh Padgham (both names I'm very familiar with), they chose an incredible-sounding studio, some of the best-sounding drums I've heard on record (the next album to be made in that particular space was Peter Gabriel's "melty-face", so there you go). Liner notes are really good too, if you're into that kind of thing.
I still have issue with the singers' snotty, slightly-out-of-tune singing style on some of the songs, I agree with you there Zing. But there's so much other audio goodness to take in on this disk, I can overlook it. Good stuff! :music-listening: :text-bravo:
 
^ Botch............. Based on your review, I want to buy this, however I have never been a XTC Fan, and for the life of me .......... where did you purchase this from?
 
If you'll recall, I did say the presentation did not disappoint. It is indeed fantastic sounding! And not just because of the multichannel tracks.


Botch said:
I still have issue with the singers' snotty, slightly-out-of-tune singing style on some of the songs, I agree with you there Zing.
Slightly? Some?? These guys make Bob Dylan sound like Pavarotti.





Cue up the Dylan fans to flame me and proclaim he is the best vocalist of a generation.
:roll:
 
You prolly won't/don't like the recordings Neil Young did with Crazy Horse, either. :mrgreen:
 
PaulyT said:
Dennie said:
This may be the best sounding disc I own....


b89b225b9da0130e7667f010.L.jpg

Discovered Again! Plus -- XRCD24

Dave Grusin

Listening to this now, and yeah it's good. Has a very intimate, clear recording style, especially in the little cymbal/high hat ticks and such in the HF, really crystal clear. And the (acoustic) bass is particularly "present" as well.

Dennie, this brings to mind a few others that I also consider great, sorta vaguely, generally similar styles (well to me anyway, or at least similar RECORDING styles, to my ear), and recordings that struck me:

Grand-Piano-Canyon.jpg



MI0000164614.jpg



2442913.jpg

Noted! Thanks Pauly,


Dennie
 
51ksgvHtwIL.jpg


Fripp and a guy named Jakko Jakszyk remixed this album to 5.1 DVD-Audio as part of KC's "40th Anniversary Series"; I pre-ordered it maybe two months ago. This is the first full studio album by Fripp's third iteration of King Crimson, the "double trio" with two guitarists, two bass/Stick players, and two drummers.
The 5.1 remix really opens this one up, and it sounds glorious! The "Frippertronics" are spread nicely and sound so full, the various percussion toys that both drummers love are crisp and clear, and the drums sound like they were recorded in a very nice room. The only thing I'm not thrilled with is, Belew's vocals sound just a bit distant; that may've been an artistic decision. Loving this!
:music-listening: :music-listening: :music-listening: :music-listening: :music-listening:
 
Pat Metheny, The Unity Sessions:

51jUGPezuPL.jpg


On my second listen this morning, decided this needs to go here too. This was recorded at the end of their 150-date world tour; they rented a small theater in NYC and recorded this using the hall's natural ambience, with lots of close-up camera work. No audience! They just play to a beautiful, reverberant, empty hall and concentrate on the music, and each other. The surround speakers just handle the ambience, like the "Audience" mix on an AIX Records release.
The drums sound really good, as does the micing on Chris Potter's sax. Pat's normal electric guitar tone is extremely mid-rangey, and probably sounds exactly the same on an .mp3 as it does here :rolleyes:, but when he closes out the album with a beautiful solo piece on an Ovation acoustic, you can close your eyes and really hear the auditorium, beautiful!

Here's a sample from EweTube, also has Pat's gizmotron or whatever it was called playing, and also Pat on guitar synth. Enjoy!

 
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