August 25th, 2023
The Late Trumpeter Jaimie Branch's Third And Final Recorded Flight Will Elevate Your Life she passed away unexpectedly at age 39By: Michael Fremer
On my previous endeavor, June of 2020 writer Jeff Flaim covered, and we discovered avant-garde trumpeter Jaimie Branch and her supercharged, trumpet, drum, bass, cello quartet: Lester St. Louis, cello, voice, flute, marimba, keyboard, Jason Ajemian, double bass, electric bass, voice, marimba, and Chad Taylor, drums, mbira, timpani , bells, marimba. What do you call this? Punk Rock improvisatory jazz? The off the charts energy level of beating drums, bass, churning... Read More
Comments: 3August 25th, 2023
The Electric Recording Company Announces Crosby, Stills, Nash Reissue Cut From Original Master Tape limited edition, of courseBy: Tracking Angle
The press release from The Electric Recording Company: The eponymous album of Crosby, Stills & Nash marked the inaugural studio release by the renowned American folk rock supergroup. Unveiled byAtlantic Records in 1969, the album stands as a seminal masterpiece within the realms of folk rock and rock music genres. With David Crosby,Stephen Stills, and Graham Nash at its core, all of whom boasted prior affiliations with accomplished bands (Crosby with The Byrds,... Read More
Comments: 11August 25th, 2023
The White Stripes' "Elephant" Gets a UHQR cut at Sterling Sound, Nashville, and Tracking Angle Was There For the Cut party atmosphere in Ryan Smith's mastering suiteBy: Michael Fremer
Acoustic Sounds just announced the forthcoming UHQR release of The White Stripes' 2002 double LP "Elephant". The lacquers were cut more than a year ago on June, 22nd, 2022. By chance I happened to be in Nashville moderating panels for Making Vinyl, Nashville and visiting United Record Pressing, Nashville Record Pressing, Welcome to 1979 and Nashville Record Productions. When Chad Kassem told me that Ryan Smith at Sterling Sound was cutting lacquers on... Read More
Comments: 14August 24th, 2023
Tracking Angle Visits Paul Gold's Salt Mastering In Greenpoint, Bklyn, N.Y. veteran disc cutter has studio filled with cool stuffBy: Michael Fremer
Veteran disc mastering engineer Paul Gold runs Salt Mastering out of a small, Greenpoint, Brooklyn, N.Y. studio crammed with tape machines—including a few rare and unusual ones you'll have to watch the video to see— and a pair of Neumann lathes. He contacted me to say he's just completed a "shaker console" he's been working on for fifteen years! And he thought I'd enjoy seeing it. I did. It's not like Shaker furniture. Gold goes back... Read More
Comments: 3August 24th, 2023
How Deep A Dive Do You Want To Go Into Frank Zappa's "Over-Nite Sensation"? you'll need dental floss to get through some 50th Anniversary box set variantsBy: Tracking Angle
Overnite Sensation FZ's legendary 1973 album's 50th anniversary super deluxe edition celebrates 50th anniversary with expanded fifty seven unreleased and rare studio and live tracks. Eighty eight track, five-disc edition includes 4 CDs and Blu-ray disc with outtakes, alternate edits and unedited bonus vault masters plus two previously unreleased shows recorded at The Hollywood Palladium and Detroit's Cobo Hall. Blu-ray includes original Quad mix, plus new surround sound and Dolby Atmos mixes of the core album. 180g vinyl set of greatest interest to Tracking Angle readers: 2 LP 180-gram black audiophile vinyl reissue with the album cut at 45 rpm for the first time ever from the original analog tape by Chris Bellman at Bernie Grundman Mastering in 2023 and a bonus 24” x 12” poster of the complete cover art.
Read More Comments: 5August 24th, 2023
SB Acoustics x Solen: Sasandu Tx Loudspeaker EXCLUSIVE First ReviewBy: John Marks
When Robert Schumann wanted to tell the world how impressed he was by the young Johannes Brahms, Schumann published words to the effect of, “Hats off, ladies and gentlemen!” That’s exactly the way I feel about Solen Electronique’s fully assembled and tested (and slightly tweaked) version of SB Acoustics’ top-of-the-line floorstanding 3-way (but with twin woofers) loudspeaker kit, the Sasandu Tx (for TeXtreme). (The sasandu is a traditional Indonesian musical... Read More
Comments: 9August 23rd, 2023
U-Turn Audio Today Launches "Gen 2" Orbit Line-up first lineup "refresh" in a decade during which time the company says it's sold "hundreds of thousands of turntables!By: Tracking Angle
BOSTON - (Aug. 23, 2023) - U-Turn Audio, an independent American maker of award-winning turntables, announces their first ever refresh of the beloved Orbit Turntable lineup. Building off a decade of success, the next generation of Orbit takes turntable design and technology to the next level with a range of new features like its high-tech magnesium tonearm, electronic speed control, revamped drive system, and more customization options than ever before. U-Turn Audio... Read More
Comments: 0August 23rd, 2023
A Short "Video Tour" of MoFi Electronics' MasterPhono MM/MC Phono Preamplifier A detailed inside lookBy: Michael Fremer
I figured before boxing it up and returning the MoFi Electronics MasterPhono I'd remove the top cover and give you a short guided tour. Read More
Comments: 0August 22nd, 2023
A True Digital Test Coming Up: Chris Bellman Digitized @192/24 Personally Overseen By Waits/Brennan Released on Vinyl you could say "why not just let Chris just cut from tape?"By: Tracking Angle
"TOM WAITS’ ENTIRE METAMORPHIC AND GROUNDBREAKING MID-PERIOD ISLAND RECORDS STUDIO CATALOG NEWLY REMASTERED FROM ORIGINAL TAPES AND PREPPED FOR RELEASE ON VINYL "AND CD FOR FIRST TIME" (all caps from press release)
Read More Comments: 20August 22nd, 2023
"A Love Supreme" Gets A Supreme Analogue Productions UHQR Release is this the best sounding "A Love Supreme" and even if it is, is it worth $150?By: Michael Fremer
"Don't throw your love away, No, no, no, no, Don't throw your love away, For you might need it someday". Lyrics from a song first recorded by The Orlons but later made popular by The Searchers. Good advice then and now.I'm not exactly "late to the fair" on this classic Coltrane album. I bought it new when it was first released January, 1965. A kid in my Cornell University, University Halls 3 dorm said "just get it" and so I... Read More
Comments: 30August 22nd, 2023
Iconoclast Cable by Belden —Additional Thoughts Dave McNair can't help but add his thoughts to Ken Redmond's review or "who get's what?"By: Dave McNair
Occasionally, more than one reviewer writing for the same publication is interested in the same gear. More rarely, two writers will intentionally receive the same component in order to involve more than one set of ears.This situation was similar, but slightly different—like the sound of different brands of audio cables. While reviewing Treehaus Audio speakers, Rich Pinto of Treehouse hipped me to a cable brand he likes and uses—Iconoclast Cables by Belden. I called... Read More
Comments: 3August 21st, 2023
Tony Williams' Baffling Masterpiece The great drummer, at age 20, defying jazz gravityBy: Fred Kaplan
Spring, drummer Tony Williams’ 1965 album on Blue Note, his second release as a leader, is a baffling recording. It’s a masterpiece. It reveals new angles, unlocks new mysteries on each listening. But beats me how or why it works.Williams (who, at the time, went by “Anthony Williams”) is credited with composing all five tracks, but except for one of them, “Love Song,” which has the structure and grace of a song, it’s hard to detect just what parts of what we hear were... Read More
Comments: 4August 21st, 2023
Rhino High Fidelity Reissues The Still Essential Van Morrison's "His Band And The Street Choir" sounds better than ever and the original RL Sterling cut was outstandingBy: Michael Fremer
Van Morrison grew up listening to American blues and soul music courtesy of his father, a Belfast shipyard worker with excellent musical taste. No surprise that he moved to America and probably not because The Shadows of Knight's version of "Gloria" became a bigger hit in the USA than did his own version with "Them" released by U.K. Decca in 1964 as the "B" side of "Baby Please Don't Go". In 1965 with the American... Read More
Comments: 10August 21st, 2023
John Marks’ Bookshelf for Lovers of Recordings #6 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: 7August 19th, 2023
Ornette Coleman’s Contemporary LPs, Luxuriously Reissued by Craft ‘Genesis Of Genius’ documents his more conventional early outingsBy: Malachi Lui
Last year, Craft Recordings released Genesis Of Genius, a vinyl or CD box set of Ornette Coleman’s two albums for Contemporary Records. The box is now discounted at multiple outlets and since Craft’s Acoustic Sounds series is reissuing the LPs individually, it’s still worth reviewing.Ornette Coleman, born and raised in Fort Worth, was controversial from the start. A working saxophonist (tenor, then a plastic alto after three men smashed his tenor sax following a show)... Read More
Comments: 2August 18th, 2023
Emil Berliner Swings For the Fences With Another Batch of "Original Source" Titles Will their bold play pay off?By: Michael Johnson
When the new batch of Deutsche Grammophon Original Source records arrived from the label for review, fellow Tracking Angle writer Mark Ward alerted me that I was on deck. And while I can’t hope to match his tour deforce review outlining the first four titles in this series, I have been eager to put into words my thoughts on the ongoing results of this monumental undertaking.While I didn’t formally review the first four titles, I did listen to all of them, and they... Read More
Comments: 29