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Showing posts with label Beatles. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Beatles. Show all posts

Thursday, April 06, 2023

Are SHM-CDs Better?

 [NOTE: I write this blog as a guy who is passionate about music, but doesn’t go broke acquiring either equipment or media. I listen on a Thorens 145 turntable with a Shure M95ED cartridge, a vintage JVC amp, a Sony SACD player, and Definitive Technology Demand D11 speakers.]

 

I recently purchased my first SHM (Super High Materials) CD. SHM CDs are manufactured in Japan, and according to the “CD Japan” website, utilize “a polycarbonate material originally developed for LCD screens, and the enhanced transparency of the SHM-CD results in more clarity, depth and definition of sound, bringing the listener ever closer to the music of the original master.”

I’ve read varying opinions on whether or not these claims are valid, so I decided to buy one and judge for myself. The CD I chose was the 2-disc Beatles’ Sgt. Pepper 50th anniversary edition. Disc 1 includes the original album, while disc 2 includes selected outtakes drawn from the 6 disc (4CD/DVD/Blu-ray) Super Deluxe Edition (SDE).

The first thing one notices is of course the packaging, which is excellent, as is the case with most Japanese CD (and vinyl) releases. In addition to the discs and the booklet, the SHM CD includes what appear to be rice paper inner sleeves for the CDs, a second booklet written in Japanese, and an OBI.

But how does it sound? The sound to me was detailed yet warm – more like the sound of vinyl than most CDs I’ve listened to (other than SACD discs). Is it better than a “regular” CD? Using the “ear” test, which is how I evaluate the sound of a particular medium and/or pressing, I’d have to say “slightly.” The music on the SHM has a subtle richness that I do not normally experience except when listening to vinyl. I can’t “prove” it through technical discussions of “zeros and ones,” or in the case of vinyl, analyses of the physics of playing a record. Not to say these issues aren’t important. I just leave them to others, and concentrate on what I hear.

Are SHM CDs worth the extra money, then? For me, that depends on several things, especially since the cost varies. I paid about $30 for the Sgt. Pepper 2-CD anniversary edition from a domestic seller that offered low-cost shipping. A brief survey of prices for the 2018 White Album 3CD SHM set shows prices from 35 to 50, but often with hefty shipping costs (understandable since most of the ones I saw were being sold by non-U.S. sellers).

Bottom line for me, is that I like the sound of my first SHM CD enough to seek out SHM pressings of my favorite albums, as well as albums I like but for which I have yet to find satisfactory pressings on CD or vinyl (such as pretty much the entire Jefferson Airplane catalog – but that’s a topic for another day).

Below is the track listing Sgt. Pepper 50th Anniversary 2-CD SHM release, identifying the source of the tracks on disc 2  in the SDE (note that the SHM track list is identical to tracks found on the 2-CD package elsewhere).

 

Disc 1: 2017 Stereo Remix of the Original Album

Disc 2: Selected Outtakes

1.      Sgt. Pepper (Take 9) [Disc 2 Track 16 SDE]

2.      With A Little Help (Take 1 False Start and Take 2 Instrumental) [D3 T14 SDE]

3.      Lucy In The Sky With Diamonds (Take 1) [D3 T6 SDE]

4.      Getting Better (Take 1 Instrumental) [D3 T8 SDE][

5.      Fixing A Hole (Take 3) [D3 T1 SDE]

6.      She’s Leaving Home (Take 1 Instrumental) [D3 T12 SDE]

7.      Being For The Benefit Of Mr. Kite (Take 4) [D3 T3 SDE]

8.      Within You Without You (Take 1 Indian Instruments) [D3 T10 SDE]

9.      When I’m Sixty-Four (Take 2) [D2 T6 SDE]

10.   Lovely Rita (Take 9) [D3 T9 SDE]

11.   Good Morning Good Morning (Take 8) [D2 T18 SDE]

12.   Sgt. Pepper (Reprise) (Take 8) [D3 T15 SDE]

13.   A Day In The Life (Take 1 and Hummed Last Chord) [D2 T11 SDE]

14.   Strawberry Fields Forever (Take 7) [D2 T3 SDE]

15.   Strawberry Fields Forever (Take 26) [D2 T4 SDE]

16.   Strawberry Fields Forever (Stereo Mix – 2015] [D2 T5 SDE]

17.   Penny Lane (Take 6 Instrumental) [D2 T7 SDE]

18.   Penny Lane (Stereo Mix – 2017) [D2 T9 SDE]




Thursday, September 10, 2020

Meant For Zapple: Allen Ginsberg: Songs of Innocence and Experience (Verve Records, 1969)

One project intended for Zapple, but scrapped due to Allen Klein's antipathy for the label and its rather non-commercial aims, was a recording of William Blake's "Songs of Innocence and Experience," set to music and performed by the poet Allen Ginsberg in the style that he imagined Blake himself performed the poems in the 18th century. Zapple A&R head Barry Miles details the proposed Ginsberg project, as well as its eventual realization in the summer of 1969 (when he produced the sessions resulting in the release of Ginsberg's work on MGM/Verve in 1970) in his book, The Zapple Diaries. Below are scans from the original Verve release.











Wednesday, August 19, 2020

Zapple Records Releases: George Harrison - Electronic Sound (Italy, 1972 Pressing)

According to DiscogsElectronic Sound was not issued in Italy until this 1972 release. Of note, and apparent in the scans below, is the absence of the Zapple logo on the label. However, both the label and inner sleeve have "Zapple 02" imprinted. The Italian labels also include the track times, not included on the original British release.






Zapple Records Releases: George Harrison - Electronic Sound (U.K. CD 1996)

Below are scans of the 1996 reissue of George Harrison's Electronic Sound, originally released on Zapple in 1969. This reissue was part of Phase Two of the 1990s Apple Records reissue series, but was not released in the United States. Digitally remastered by Ron Furmanek. 

The CD  booklet includes the following quote (not found on the original release), attributed to Harrison: "It could be called avant garde, but a more apt description would be (in the words of my old friend Alvin), Avant Garde clue!" No date or source for this quote is provided, and an Internet search found the only source to be this CD.






Wednesday, August 12, 2020

Beatles Vinyl Reissues Update (August 2020)

 

Beatles Vinyl Reissues Update

Beatles and Beatles-Related Vinyl reissues recently released or previously released but newly available.


Paul McCartney, Flaming Pie (1/2 Speed mastered)

Reissued as 2-LP, 3-LP (with an LP of home demos in addition to the original album) or 4-LP set (with a 12-inch one-sided Pressing of “Ballad Of The Skeletons”) as part of the collector’s edition) pressed on 180 gram vinyl. Reissued July 31, 2020.

https://www.flaming-pie.com/products/3lp


Linda McCartney: Wide Prairie (Blue and White Vinyl)

Linda’s 1998 LP, with assistance from Paul. Reissued 2019.

The Reissue of Linda McCartney's 'Wide Prairie' is Out Now | PaulMcCartney.com

 

Ringo Starr, 45 RPM Box Set (3 7” black vinyl 45s)

Originally released for Record Store Day in 2013, this box set includes repressings of three Apple Records Ringo 45s, with reproductions of their original picture sleeves. Includes “It Don’t Come Easy/Early 1970,” “Photograph/Down and Out,” and “Goodnight Vienna/Oo-Wee.”

Ringo Starr - Ringo 45 RPM Singles Limited Edition Box Set – uDiscover Music

 

Ron Wood’s 1974 album, with George’s song “Far East Man,” on red or purple swirl vinyl. Forthcoming, 9/18/20.

Ron Wood - I've Got My Own Album To Do (180 Gram Translucent Red Audiophile Vinyl/Limited Anniversary Edition) | Shop the Friday Music Official Store

Ron Wood - I've Got My Own Album To Do (180 Gram Translucent Purple Swirl Audiophile Vinyl/Limited Anniversary Edition) | Shop the Friday Music Official Store


Beatles Singles Box

It pays to keep on Barnes & Noble, especially their “exclusive” releases. This is a four disc box set containing four Beatles 45s. Little information regarding the release is provided on the B&N website, but the “Ticket To Ride” and “Yellow. Submarine” 45s appear to be included, along with a poster.

The Singles [7" Vinyl]