Krokodyle wrote:
But it's so freakin' upsetting that we are STILL waiting for the "Regatta" deluxe set. *sigh*
TheEqualizer wrote:- CD4 also features unreleased Police songs including an early version of Andy Summers’ 1982 track ‘Goodbye Tomorrow’ (later renamed ‘Someone To Talk To’); a demo of a Stewart Copeland penned song ‘I’m Blind’ which later resurfaced as the renamed ‘Brothers on Wheels’ for Copeland’s acclaimed soundtrack to Francis Ford Coppola’s ‘Rumblefish’; an unreleased first take of ‘Truth Hits Everybody’ (originally from the 1978 debut Outlandos d’Amour’); and rare covers of the Eddie Cochran song ‘Three Steps To Heaven’ and ‘Rock and Roll Music’ by Chuck Berry
TheEqualizer wrote:TheEqualizer wrote:- CD4 also features unreleased Police songs including an early version of Andy Summers’ 1982 track ‘Goodbye Tomorrow’ (later renamed ‘Someone To Talk To’); a demo of a Stewart Copeland penned song ‘I’m Blind’ which later resurfaced as the renamed ‘Brothers on Wheels’ for Copeland’s acclaimed soundtrack to Francis Ford Coppola’s ‘Rumblefish’; an unreleased first take of ‘Truth Hits Everybody’ (originally from the 1978 debut Outlandos d’Amour’); and rare covers of the Eddie Cochran song ‘Three Steps To Heaven’ and ‘Rock and Roll Music’ by Chuck Berry
Seems like CD4 may not be specifically Synchronicity era related. Kind of weird.
ManWithGoodTaste wrote:When the albums were included on Message in a Box (a prized possession of mine), those versions already sounded perfect. There is only so much quality and dynamic range you can squeeze inside the constraints of 16bit and 44,100hz, and in 1993 it was done RIGHT. No, remastering it not magic. You cannot just remaster and remaster, and make it sound better every time. That is impossible. I wish more people were tech savvy and actually understood that.
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