Formula for Fidelity: Oneiros Loudspeakers Channel Racing Excellence
As a back-catalog label, Rhino was active early in the vinyl revivaland it continues to be. Rhino quickly learned that a popular older album, when released as a high-quality physical artifactwhether it's an LP, a CD box, a multichannel Blu-ray audio disc, or a combination of formatsengages fans more than merely dropping a new remaster onto streaming. I spoke with Rhino's president, Mark Pinkus, about the company's three-tier vinyl strategy soon after the company announced the third of those tiers, a new, lower-priced all-analog vinyl line called Rhino Reserve.
The ultimate indication that an audiophile reissue is worth paying for lies in its resale value on the secondary markets, especially eBay and Discogs. If there are lots of copies for sale that are open and played, it's usually a sign that folks are disappointed. On the other hand, if a reissue titleand this covers Analogue Productions' 2009 reissue of Humble Pie's Smokin'routinely fetches upwards of $100 on the secondary market (and sealed copies above $200), it means, first, that the pressing has probably sold out (a good sign) and, second, that it's probably worth the lucre.
In October 2024, AP repressed its much-sought-after 180gm reissue of Smokin', mastered by Kevin Gray from a ½" flat-tape copy of the original master tape. As this review was being written, copies were still available. It comes packaged in a Stoughton Printing tip-on jacket. It's a high-quality product all around.