September 5th, 2023
Three Hours of Hypnotic Bliss: Laraaji’s ‘Segue To Infinity’ Numero’s 4LP box set collects the zither master’s early recordingsBy: Malachi Lui
As listeners and reissue labels contextualize new age music in the broader history of ambient music, probably the biggest resurgence has been that of Laraaji, the zither master who’s worked with Brian Eno, Haruomi Hosono, and Bill Laswell, and who also leads laughter meditation workshops. Now, Numero Group presents Segue To Infinity, a recently released 4LP box set encompassing his first LP, 1978’s Celestial Vibration, and three discs of recently discovered recordings from the same time.
Read More Comments: 2September 5th, 2023
Geffen/UMe Goes All In on Nirvana's "In Utero" 30th Anniversary Reissue Box 8 180g LPs, 72 tracks, 53 live unreleased, including L.A. and Seattle concertsBy: Michael Fremer
Originally released September 21, 1993 and recorded by Steve Albini, In Utero was Nirvana's first #1 debut on the Billboard 200 and went on to 6x platinum certification in the United States. The 30th anniversary release will be issued October, 27th, 2023 in a variety of formats including include a limited-edition 8LP Super Deluxe box set, 5CD Super Deluxe box set, 1 LP + 10” edition, 2CD Deluxe edition, and a Digital Super Deluxe edition. (Interestingly,... Read More
Comments: 4September 3rd, 2023
Brian Wilson and Van Dyke Parks' 'Orange Crate Art' "Hold(s) Back Time" From the archives: Brian Wilson and Van Dyke Parks release a misty eyed, warm hearted song cycle of California nostalgiaBy: Michael Fremer
(This review originally appeared in Issue 5/6, Winter 1995/96. A 25th Anniversary double vinyl LP issued by Omnivore with new liner notes and three previously unissued outtakes is currently available—see clickthrough at page bottom).When I was a child, I had a middle-aged second cousin Sophie who lived in far away California. She came to visit one cold New York winter in the late 1950s, bearing crates of tissue wrapped oranges, and jellies and jams from a place with a... Read More
Comments: 1September 3rd, 2023
Golden Smog's 'Down By The Old Mainstream' From the archives: A supergroup mimicking the 70sBy: Michael Fremer
(This review originally appeared in Issue 7, Spring 1996.)It is at once comforting and depressing to hear a band of (relative) youngsters writing and performing songs, most of which could easily be dropped into a cassette tape compilation from the early 70s and segue way so smoothly you’d never know they were new. Since I choose comfort over depression every time, I’m enjoying the hell out of this set of alternative shitkicker music which gracefully slips and slides... Read More
Comments: 1September 1st, 2023
"Stop Making Sense" Gets Re-Mastered and Issued-in-Full on Limited Edition Double LP Set for the first time you get the full live concert set list (on vinyl), but what about the sound?By: Michael Fremer
(There are two reviews of this record published simultaneously, one by Michael Fremer and one by Malachi Lui, the two working independently, for a young and an "I was around then" perspective).Chris Frantz writes in the updated booklet packaged with this new double LP set of the difficulties involved in mounting the complicated, unique, never before (or since) seen stage show that the late Jonathan Demme so well captured in the film "Stop Making... Read More
Comments: 16September 1st, 2023
Talking Heads’ Complete "Stop Making Sense", Finally Released On Vinyl same as it ever was…By: Malachi Lui
Immortalized in Jonathan Demme’s 1984 film Stop Making Sense, Talking Heads’ 1983 tour was the theatrical rock tour that ended all theatrical rock tours before it and raised the standard for those following. Choreographed but natural, theatrical but not outlandish, designed but also not, the newly reissued Stop Making Sense still resonates in its societal commentary and continuing influence.
Read More Comments: 2August 31st, 2023
John Marks’ Bookshelf for Lovers of Recordings #7 A DOZEN BOOKS REVIEWED, ONE A WEEK FOR THE NEXT TWELVEBy: John Marks
Here are notes on a selection from my favorite books on the history of recording technology, the history of the record business, and the interactions between recording technology, the record business, and the art of music. One example of what I mean by all that is, in the late 1920s, piezoelectric “crystal” microphones supplanted carbon microphones for radio broadcasting. Crystal microphones had a better signal-to-noise ratio than carbon microphones. Therefore, the... Read More
Comments: 2August 31st, 2023
Which "Jazz Samba" Sounds Best? if ever there was a "belongs in every collection" record, this classic is oneBy: Michael Fremer
"Jazz Samba" wasn't the first Bossa Nova record released in The United States, and it wasn't called one, but it was, and upon its release in 1962 it broke open the Brazilian music floodgate. Within months of its release there was Bossa Nova everything. This record was also the first in a popular series of Creed Taylor produced Verve releases featuring on their covers Olga Albizu's abstract art. It was a winning formula.Recorded in a single day... Read More
Comments: 5August 30th, 2023
Clearaudio electronic GmbH, Erlangen, Germany Celebrates 45th Anniversary With Party and Factory Tour a week before High End Munich 2023, Clearaudio threw a partyBy: Michael Fremer
Last Spring, 2023 Clearaudio, a company best known for it's turntables, tonearms, phono cartridges and record cleaning machines celebrated its 45th anniversary. Rather than mounting its usual large High End Munich main floor exhibit, the company chose to throw a big party before the show for its distributors around the world and for others who would normally have met with them at the High End show to do business. The cozy restaurant attached to the Inn in which... Read More
Comments: 0August 29th, 2023
Agnew Analog Introduces A New Lacquer Cutting Lathe! the first new lathe in how many decades?By: Michael Fremer
(Photo credit: Sarah Beastman Hamilton [Lebeast Photography of Vancouver, BC, Canada])Greece-based Agnew Analog, recently introduced the Agnew Analog Reference Instrument Type 612, a brand new disk mastering lathe, now available to order. It's the first new "from the ground up" lacquer cutting lathe to be introduced in since 1966 which is when Neumann introduced its VMS 66 (L.J. Scully began making them in the 1930s for 78rpm record manufacturing). The... Read More
Comments: 3August 29th, 2023
Neil Young's Long-Neglected Mid-80s Country Album From the archives: Mobile Fidelity's ANADISQ 200 reissue of Neil Young's 'Old Ways'By: Michael Fremer
(This review originally appeared in The Tracking Angle Magazine Issue 7, Spring 1996.)Bryan Ferry covering Gogi Grant’s dramatic “The Wayward Wind” has always been one of my musical dreams, but Neil Young does a more than adequate version to open this long neglected mid-80s Young country album. While he doesn’t bring the kind of “camp” to the tune Ferry could, he’s got the spirit right, with cascading strings (17 count ‘em pieces), Waylon Jennings on guitar, and Bela... Read More
Comments: 2August 29th, 2023
Onzow Issues a New Instruction For the Zero Dust a multi-year, multi-website epic ends here (even though I thought it concluded May 1st)By: Michael Fremer
Last May 1st, Tracking Angle published "The Onzow Zerodust Controversy Concludes Here" in which I thought we'd put the story forever to rest. I thought "everyone" would be satisfied by the instructions published there. Please read them using the above hyperlink.Later Onzo Labs' Akira Ishibashi requested that I remove the original photo we'd been using to show the residue left on the stylus, to one more representative of what WAM... Read More
Comments: 24August 28th, 2023
Ray Barretto’s "Que Viva La Música" Returns to Vinyl an AAA package of a classic release from the legendary congueroBy: Evan Toth
You’ve never seen a cleaner Cadillac in your life. My 1985 Eldorado was triple black and it proudly boasted the “Biarritz” package which upgraded it with a stainless steel roof and extra plush leather seats. Even though it was over a decade old by the time I took ownership of the vehicle, you wouldn’t know it because of how carefully I cleaned and detailed it almost each and every weekend. In the summer evenings, with the Eldorado in showroom condition, a buddy or two... Read More
Comments: 0August 27th, 2023
EBS's Rainer Maillard Responds To Michael Johnson's Gilels Brahms "The Piano Concertos" Record Review regarding tracking difficulty and sonic "breakup"By: Tracking Angle
(Photo of Rainer Maillard at Emile Berliner Studios, 2019 by Michael Fremer)Tracking Angle invited DGG "Original Source" Series producer/mixer Rainer Maillard and cutting engineer Sidney C. Meyer to respond to Michael Johnson's review of the "second batch" of titles, specifically with the tracking issues he encountered on the Brahms The Piano Concertos disc.Mr. Maillard responded:With each cut we had to make decisions and thereby were forced... Read More
Comments: 23August 27th, 2023
T+A - P 3100 HV Preamplifier Can Dave McNair find love with a high-end, solid-state preamp?By: Dave McNair
After chatting with the most affable Dave Nauber, CEO of T+A North America, I agreed to review the company’s flagship preamp, the P 3100 HV - fitted with an optional MC phono card. I told him I’m a tube guy and that listening to and writing about a modern, solid-state, German-made preamp from a company I knew almost nothing about was not the first thing that comes to mind when thinking fun review.Mr. Nauber remained calmly undaunted and said, "I’ll be shocked if... Read More
Comments: 1August 27th, 2023
Blue Note Classics Reissues Cecil Taylor’s ‘Unit Structures’ 1966 avant-garde essential gets first all-analog reissueBy: Malachi Lui
For Cecil Taylor, the word “jazz” didn’t represent the music’s rich historical and geographical lineage. The further he progressed, the more he distanced himself from such strict definition. And considering his music, why wouldn’t he? A classically-trained pianist who worshipped Ellington but also studied and admired Stockhausen and Xenakis, it took almost a decade before Taylor’s brilliance fully revealed itself in the studio. Yet even on his debut album, the 1956... Read More
Comments: 6