by blueboy on 03 Jul 2007 17:06
You will only notice a difference in sound with the newly remastered versions if you are really picky (like me).
Basically the sound is "cleaner", (particularly on the first three albums) due to better conversion from the analog sources, and the fact that some of the master tapes used were better than the safety copies used for MIAB.
The other thing you might notice is that they sound a little "louder", and that is unfortunately due to the fact that most new albums today are over-compressed and limited to make them sound louder than competing releases. Thankfully, the mastering engineer who did the new releases didn't go too far, and the result is still listenable.
The problem for me though, is that extra compression and limiting affect the transients in the drum sounds. Stewart's snare and kick for example, don't "jump" out of the mix with the same sharp attack that they have on the MIAB versions, because the surrounding music is louder relative to the percussion. If you listen to the kick drum in the intro and first verse to ELTSDIM as an example, it slowly builds with excitement as the kick has a punchy and spikey quality that "snaps" and pushes the rhythm and builds tension leading up to the exploding chorus. On the new version, the kick sounds like it "plods" rather than "pushes" due to the extra compression and rounder EQ. I'm very sensitive to the transients in music, and this new version just leaves me cold and bored.
I was really disappointed because I bought the whole catalog on Super Audio CD, and was hoping to hear virtually "untouched" master recordings. They should have done a separate master for SACD with the full dynamic range intact, and then used the "contemporary" sounding compression for just the regular CD releases.
Sorry if this sounds like it is getting into TJ7 "Anal"-lytical territory, but most musicians and audio engineers will probably understand what I'm getting at.