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Article: Final Destination: Supersense in Vienna, Austria


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The master tape was cued up, a test lacquer was put in place, and the magic began.

 

 

sorry to go all lawyer on you 

 

from https://blog.discogs.com/en/what-is-a-master-tape-chad-kassem-acoustic-sounds/

 

“A master tape is a tape used to record the band originally. It’s the tape,” he explains. (The exception, he adds, is when one bounces a multitrack tape down to two-track. In those cases, that tape is the master.) “

 

 

"Master Tape" is a term that gets tossed about but I'm thinking he does not have the master tape for at least some of these. By definition, there is only one master tape for any given recording. It is highly doubtful that he has the master tape for "Getz/Gilberto" or "A Love Supreme"

 

from the Mastercut website "Our Mastercut Records are cut directly from completely unedited 1:1 copies of carefully selected original tapes of carefully selected sound recordings."

 

copies of original tapes are not master tapes


 

 

 

 

 

see my system at Audiogon  https://systems.audiogon.com/systems/768

 

 

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42 minutes ago, bbosler said:

 

 

 

sorry to go all lawyer on you 

 

from https://blog.discogs.com/en/what-is-a-master-tape-chad-kassem-acoustic-sounds/

 

“A master tape is a tape used to record the band originally. It’s the tape,” he explains. (The exception, he adds, is when one bounces a multitrack tape down to two-track. In those cases, that tape is the master.) “

 

 

"Master Tape" is a term that gets tossed about but I'm thinking he does not have the master tape for at least some of these. By definition, there is only one master tape for any given recording. It is highly doubtful that he has the master tape for "Getz/Gilberto" or "A Love Supreme"

 

from the Mastercut website "Our Mastercut Records are cut directly from completely unedited 1:1 copies of carefully selected original tapes of carefully selected sound recordings."

 

copies of original tapes are not master tapes


 

 

 

 

Thanks for the post. Absolutely correct. 

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just to add a little fuel to the fire... It is usually  interesting when you start to dig into the provenance of these recordings. Those producing these recordings are very clever about how they phrase their ad copy so you have to be very discerning as it is easy to make assumptions. 

 

I stopped dealing with HDtracks many years ago when it came to light that some of their high resolution files ( > 16/44.1 ) were actually up sampled 16/44.1.  When called on it they  didn't deny it, they  just  claimed they didn't have the resources to check each file so relied on whoever supplied the file to be honest about it. I called BS on that and never went back.

 

I have no idea if they cleaned up their act. but hard to believe that they, like Amazon and others,  actually have original files at 24/192 for a lot of these recordings. This seems especially true  when you click on the info button for some and there is nothing about where they got the file. nothing

 

For the  "A Love Supreme" the Mastercut site  says Cut directly from a completely unedited 1:1 copy of the original tape provided by Universal Music, one has never been closer to the artist, the original sound waves and music history.

 

Sounds good, (pun intended) but  what is the provenance of the tape they were provided? At a minimum this is cut from a copy of a tape Mastercuts has  that is copy of a tape from Universal that is a copied from who knows where? 

 

According to Acoustic Sounds the mater tape for "A Love Supreme" does exist but is in poor shape. https://store.acousticsounds.com/d/167060/John_Coltrane-A_Love_Supreme-14_Inch_-_15_IPS_Tape so how many generations removed is the copy that Matercuts was provided, is it  an unedited copy of a copy of a copy of a copy .... who did the transfer, what was the quality of the decks and the expertise of those who did the copying. etc. ??

 

Even Acoustic Sounds gets in on the BS train when they claim their $500 R2R offering of "A Love Supreme" is Sourced from original master tapes. Again, sounds good until you realize It's not necessarily a copy of the master tape, just sourced from it, which is total BS because every copy every released has to be "sourced" from the original even if it is an MP3 copy. Where else would it come from?

 

also like to point out that lacquers are very fragile and unlike vinyl , absolutely do not stand up to repeated plays. 

 

The point of this is not to denigrate Mastercuts since I know little about them. This may be the best sounding copy of this title that has ever existed for all I know. Just a heads up to do your due diligence before shelling out the kind of money these outfits want for their products.  

 

another take from a crowd not as kind as I am . and BTW Bob... Fremer has already been there 😜

 

https://www.analogplanet.com/content/want-lacquer-love-supreme-cut-original-master-tape

 

 

 

see my system at Audiogon  https://systems.audiogon.com/systems/768

 

 

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4 hours ago, bbosler said:

just to add a little fuel to the fire... It is usually  interesting when you start to dig into the provenance of these recordings. Those producing these recordings are very clever about how they phrase their ad copy so you have to be very discerning as it is easy to make assumptions. 

 

I stopped dealing with HDtracks many years ago when it came to light that some of their high resolution files ( > 16/44.1 ) were actually up sampled 16/44.1.  When called on it they  didn't deny it, they  just  claimed they didn't have the resources to check each file so relied on whoever supplied the file to be honest about it. I called BS on that and never went back.

 

I have no idea if they cleaned up their act. but hard to believe that they, like Amazon and others,  actually have original files at 24/192 for a lot of these recordings. This seems especially true  when you click on the info button for some and there is nothing about where they got the file. nothing

 

For the  "A Love Supreme" the Mastercut site  says Cut directly from a completely unedited 1:1 copy of the original tape provided by Universal Music, one has never been closer to the artist, the original sound waves and music history.

 

Sounds good, (pun intended) but  what is the provenance of the tape they were provided? At a minimum this is cut from a copy of a tape Mastercuts has  that is copy of a tape from Universal that is a copied from who knows where? 

 

According to Acoustic Sounds the mater tape for "A Love Supreme" does exist but is in poor shape. https://store.acousticsounds.com/d/167060/John_Coltrane-A_Love_Supreme-14_Inch_-_15_IPS_Tape so how many generations removed is the copy that Matercuts was provided, is it  an unedited copy of a copy of a copy of a copy .... who did the transfer, what was the quality of the decks and the expertise of those who did the copying. etc. ??

 

Even Acoustic Sounds gets in on the BS train when they claim their $500 R2R offering of "A Love Supreme" is Sourced from original master tapes. Again, sounds good until you realize It's not necessarily a copy of the master tape, just sourced from it, which is total BS because every copy every released has to be "sourced" from the original even if it is an MP3 copy. Where else would it come from?

 

also like to point out that lacquers are very fragile and unlike vinyl , absolutely do not stand up to repeated plays. 

 

The point of this is not to denigrate Mastercuts since I know little about them. This may be the best sounding copy of this title that has ever existed for all I know. Just a heads up to do your due diligence before shelling out the kind of money these outfits want for their products.  

 

another take from a crowd not as kind as I am . and BTW Bob... Fremer has already been there 😜

 

https://www.analogplanet.com/content/want-lacquer-love-supreme-cut-original-master-tape

 

 

I should have guessed that Fremmer would have already been there. On a more somber note, many of the original master tapes were lost in the tragic fire several years ago at a storage facility in California if memory serves. And, as you allude to, many more masters have not been properly maintained and are nearly unusable. All of this is of course not new. The ancient Greeks, Egyptians and Romans all struggled with the preservation of their cultural heritage with limited success. 

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Very nice experience....I'm envious.  Thanks for sharing.

 

I agree with the comments about provenance.   A lot of abuse in the industry that one must navigate.  

 

I have an old turntable and records from the 70's.   I don't know if it was the vinyl mastering that makes it sound so good or my memories from my youth dictating how the song should sound.  I get around this dilemma by recording the vinyl to 24/192.   You need an exceptionally high end system to make this work.   When recorded I never seem to play the record again.

Mac Mini 2007: 1.83GHz Core 2 Duo, 3 Gig RAM, 500 Gig 5400 RPM HD[br]OSX 10.6.6, TimeMachine Off, Airport Off, Dedicated to Music[br]HAGUSB USB-->S/PDIF[br]Players: Audirvana, ITunes[br]Music Library: RedBook 16/44 WAV[br]Bryston BP26DA Preamp/DAC[br]Bryston 3BSST Amp[br]B&W 804s Loudspeakers[br]

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1 hour ago, Rcanoe said:

 I get around this dilemma by recording the vinyl to 24/192.   You need an exceptionally high end system to make this work.  

 

I have tried this multiple times with various configurations including ChannelD Pure Vinyl Seta preamps, what many would consider to be some of the best phono preamps, some of the best Pro Audio interfaces from Lynx, Apogee, and Antelope to do the analog to digital using Mutec reclockers and 10 MHZ reference clocks...etc.. ... and in every case, something is lost compared to feeding the phono preamp direct (no A to D). Yes, you can improve some aspects once you have it digitized buy applying DSP, room correction, and such... but something about the vinyl magic is lost. 

 

In my experience.... digitized vinyl can sound very, very good.. it just can't sound as good

 

 

 

 

 

see my system at Audiogon  https://systems.audiogon.com/systems/768

 

 

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I walked a way not questioning my love of digital audio, or feeling like I'm missing out without a turntable, but rather with an appreciation for how people enjoy whatever it is that they enjoy. 

 

Perfectly stated! At the end of the day, there’s really no rules per se.  
 

Digital is better, vinyl is better, this or that etc…. Really never understood how one can impose what they hear, feel, experience as the de facto, THE bar being set.  Happens constantly day in, day out.  
 

Sure there are some commonalities, but the medium, a component, are all but just part of the total system + experience.  What genuinely moves you is what matters IMHO.

My rig

 

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I have a friend who has a highly tweaked vinyl rig,and has put much work in upping his digital replay. When either of these two setups are working at a high enough level, then you get a match. That is, the character of some recording, which he has  on LP, or he or I have it on CD, is delivered to be the same - yes, there will be some surface noise, on vinyl, the bass won't be as well defined - those who are obsessed with FR aspects will doubtlessly disagree :); but the essence of what was captured at the time will be identical ...

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