Schmoelling in wonderland wrote:Thanks Flashpoint for your answer.
So, it mean that the original VIRGIN CD's from the Virgin period have a better sound quality than the Remasters ?
Hi, I think the sound quality of the original Virgin CD's is best for most TD albums. Of course that is entirely a matter of personal preference.
Schmoelling in wonderland wrote:I never heard the original Virgin CD's of White Eagle or Hyperborea. I do think i have the original Virgin CD for Logos and the sound is quite good.
That Logo's CD in my opinion is as good as the vinyl. The later CD versions were not, once again a matter of personal preference.
Schmoelling in wonderland wrote:When it was the time to buy TD album from the virgin period, i always bought the 1995 Remaster because the packaging was more beautiful
So did I. An old friend introduced me to the original Virgin [and Jive and Relativity] CD's. I then did my own side to side compares and in almost every case I preferred the originals CD to the remastered versions. Maybe it's because they were from the original Master tapes , maybe it was the lack of noise reduction [which always takes away music and most engineers have not used it in over 15 years]. In any case I spent a long time seeking out all the originals and in nearly every case it was well worth the effort. The only exception may be the 1995 Phaedra which I feel is a small amount better than the original CD. Yet again, all a matter of personal preference
Schmoelling in wonderland wrote:
For Exit, i never saw the Virgin CD. It is always the Elektra CD in Canada. Wich one do you have ?
Exit has always been on Elektra in North America. Europe and elsewhere it is on Virgin. I have the Elektra and several different Virgin versions, I like the original Virgin CD the best, but the original Elektra is close. The 1995 to me has a low ceiling , almost like it's been smothered. Noise reduction will do that. What I think is important to remember is pre-digital recordings unless on Dolby A reels will always have hiss. It's inherent to the physical medium. My feeling is embrace it as it means all of the music is still there. Besides after 20-30 seconds you don't notice it anymore. That is probably the reason the competent audio transfer engineers stopped using noise reduction for CD remasterings over 15 years ago. I wish some of them had worked for Esoteric