Showing posts with label stereo. Show all posts
Showing posts with label stereo. Show all posts

Wednesday, September 9, 2009

Beatles Remasters

The Beatles's entire catalog was finally released in newly remastered form for the first time since their records appeared in compact disc form in 1987. The ninth day of the ninth month of the ninth year of this century was an appropriate release date (albeit a Wednesday, bypassing the usual Tuesday standard),as it was John Lennon's lucky number.
Monophonic versions of each LP through the Yellow Submarine soundtrack (the last Beatles album released in mono) and stereo versions of their first four LPs are available for the first time on CD in history, resulting in previously rare variations of the original masters. On the stereo version of "Please Please Me" from the album of the same name, John Lennon gets a line wrong (he incorrectly sings "Why do I never even try, girl?") toward the end of the song and thus sings the words "Come on" with a chuckle. Paradoxically, a mono remix of "Helter Skelter" from the White Album fades out but doesn't fade back in so you don't hear Ringo's scream about blisters on his fingers.
It seems ironic that the Beatles were among the last recording artists to have their work issued on CD, yet Apple Corps has since used the compact disc format to re-present the group's work in fresh and exciting ways, from the BBC Radio discs and Anthology series to a reworked variations of the Yellow Submarine soundtrack and the Let It Be LP. And that's not to mention the CD versions of the repackaged albums Capitol compiled before 1967 (so I won't).
Also out today is the video game "The Beatles : Rock Band." I'm not into gaming, so i can't comment on that much. But I can't wait to hear the new CDs.
The Past Masters collections compiling the Beatles's nonalbum tracks, as noted earlier on this blog, are being reissued as a single package rather than as two separate releases.
I'll comment on President Obama's speech later.

Wednesday, April 8, 2009

The Beatles On CD . . . Again

When the Beatles' catalog was first issued on compact disc in 1987 - seems like a long time ago, huh? - EMI righted a wrong that had long gone uncorrected, restoring the Beatles's first seven albums to the way they had been issued in the United Kingdom (Capitol in the United States padded them out to ten titles). Paradoxically, the Beatles were among the last artistes from the vinyl age to be reissued on CD. And although posthumous releases of previously unreleased Beatles material in the nineties and two thousand zeroes made the most out of the format (especially the Anthology series), the original catalog was never remastered with the most advanced technology, making the audio quality of the 1987 issues seem stale.
Until now. Apple Corps has announced that on September 9, 2009, the entire Beatles catalog will finally be remastered for a new generation of fans. The CDs will be packaged with the artwork from the original U.K. releases (plus the Capitol-compiled Magical Mystery Tour album, which gathered all of the tracks from 1967 outside Sgt. Pepper), along with new liner notes to complement original album notes, rare photos (there are Beatles photos we haven't seen yet?), and, for a limited time, embedded documentary films about each of the original albums. The Past Masters CDs, which gathered the 33 nonalbum tracks the Beatles recorded, will be merged into one.
The albums were remastered by of engineers at EMI's Abbey Road Studios in London over four yeas, using the latest recording technology and 1960s vintage studio equipment to maintain the sound of the original releases to ensure the highest fidelity possible. All fourteen albums will be issued in stereo, hence the first four Beatles albums (Please Please Me, With the Beatles, A Hard Day's Night, Beatles for Sale) will be in stereophonic sound for the first time. The stereo releases will be gathered n a box set along with a DVD compiling the miniature documentaries. A second box set will compile the original Beatles mono releases as well, for those who prefer the mono sound of the earlier records (and truth be told, audiophiles prefer the monophonic versions of the first four albums and the earlier singles).
This is the most ambitious issue from Apple since the Anthology series, maybe even since the original Beatles CD issues. A splendid time will indeed be guaranteed for all. :-)
The release date - September 9, 2009 - is appropriate. It's the ninth day of the ninth month of the ninth year of the century.
John Lennon always considered nine a lucky number. :-)