What are the best sounding albums in your opinion?

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Back in the day, THE THE - Infected

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Mike Oldfield - Amarok
Sei wachsam

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I'd happily list ones with low fidelity recording or something live recorded on a crappy cassette recorder. It's not about sounding 'best' - albums just sound the way that they sound.

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tehlord wrote:Back in the day, THE THE - Infected
Huh. I must admit, THE THE's first album, while I wasn't that into it as a music listener, I have often used it as reference tracks.

The remastered Rolling Stones album, Hot Rocks?. Very good sounding.

For metal, the first Rage Against the Machine disc. Even if it is a little lower volume by loudness warrior standards.

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Vinnie Vincent Invasion: Invasion (remastered, 2003)

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Violator-depeche MODE

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robojam wrote:I'd happily list ones with low fidelity recording or something live recorded on a crappy cassette recorder. It's not about sounding 'best' - albums just sound the way that they sound.
Why would you happily list records that are "low fidelity" or "crappy" when someone asks you to suggest records that sound good? Of course a record can be good without sounding good or be crap despite sounding good, but that's irrelevant here.

Examples of good workmanship are valuable for persons who aim to become good at what they're doing. Reference recordings are fundamental for mixing.

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Astronaut Wife - Flying Saucer

Cocteau Twins - Heaven or Las Vegas

Steve Roach - Structures From Silence

The Jayhawks - Hollywood Town Hall

Jimi Hendrix - Blues

King's X - Faith Hope Love
"The Law speaks too softly to be heard amid the din of arms." -- Gaius Marius {Roman consul,soldier}

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Joy Division - Closer
David Bowie - Ziggy Stardust
Led Zeppelin - Led Zeppelin
T.Rex - Electric Warrior

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ontol wrote:One standout for me, at least as far as mixing goes, is Rumors by Fleetwood Mac.

I am not a huge Fleetwood Mac fan, but I have heard songs from that album in a million different places through as many different systems and it always sounds clear. Whether it was a huge and expensive system or some tiny little transistor radio half-buried in the sand at the beach.
+1 on this.. not a fan either, but great sounding album. A couple more on my personal fave list:

Amused to Death -- Roger Waters... just love the dynamics of this album, both in terms of songwriting and production

Pretenders II ... ok, maybe this is the nostalgia talking, but this album has a special place in my heart and ears...

Ghost in the Machine / Zenyatta Mondatta ... either one, take your pick

Reach the Beach -- The Fixx ... crystalline 80's pop... love his voice...

Moving Pictures ... have to +1 this...

Elemental -- Tears for Fears... another album w/ great dynamics... and clean clean clean

Woodface -- Crowded House ... clean production and engineering here...

Brown Sugar -- D'Angelo... another from D'Angelo... haven't heard Voodoo, but Brown Sugar is actually on my Top 4 or 5 All Timers list... fantastic sound and production here...


I'm sure there are many more... Zeppelin, etc. G*d... just looking at that list... modern engineering sux dog poo, it really does... :)
You need to limit that rez, bro.

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It really does mostly but sometimes I hear exceptions. Every once in a while someone has just the right amount of "limiting" w/o the "smash to death" syndrome.

BTW, worst mixed records? Mars Volta. Just horrible. Can't listen to them on cans......CAN'T DO IT!

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skipscada wrote:
robojam wrote:I'd happily list ones with low fidelity recording or something live recorded on a crappy cassette recorder. It's not about sounding 'best' - albums just sound the way that they sound.
Why would you happily list records that are "low fidelity" or "crappy" when someone asks you to suggest records that sound good?
Because it's subjective and that type of recording might be "the best sounding album" to me.

Why wouldn't I list it?

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Last edited by lofty on Sun Dec 20, 2020 9:24 pm, edited 2 times in total.

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robojam wrote:
skipscada wrote:
robojam wrote:I'd happily list ones with low fidelity recording or something live recorded on a crappy cassette recorder. It's not about sounding 'best' - albums just sound the way that they sound.
Why would you happily list records that are "low fidelity" or "crappy" when someone asks you to suggest records that sound good?
Because it's subjective and that type of recording might be "the best sounding album" to me.

Why wouldn't I list it?
I agree, with a caveat. The problem is that you are right, 'best' is indeed subjective.

Not all evaluations of recordings have to be that subjective, though. The idea of 'fidelity' is nowhere near as subjective as 'best'. And there are definitely some recordings that have better fidelity than others.

But fidelity is almost gone as a standard in recording (except for orchestral recordings). Most people are going after a 'sound' that is highly artificial, so there is no standard to judge this sound against like there always was in the days if high fidelity (e.g. 'Is it live or is it Memorex?). This is all well and good, but people still want a simple standard even though there really isn't one.

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