In my As We See It column in the January 2021 Stereophile, I wrote about stories we tell ourselves to make our lives and music betterpersonal stories like the one about my relationship to my Thorens TD-124 turntable, or about hanging out with your dad (or mom) listening to records. Also hi-fi stories like the ones about the types of audio components we preferanalog, digital, tubed, solid stateand how they sound. "Stories deepen our relationships," I wrote, "including our relationships with our audio systems and the music they make."
Records To Live For! In an ordinary year, the name of this annual feature, published every February since 1991, is a harmless, even amusing joke. In last year's opening essay, I evoked a heavily armed intruder perusing your record collection late at night and holding your favorite record in his hands: Would you risk your life by confronting him? That's hardly the first time that an author of the R2D4 lead essay made a joke about possibly dying.
Revinylization #13: Tone Poet, Analogue Productions, ERC reissues
Jan 08, 2021
For jazz fans, a new batch of releases in Blue Note's Tone Poet seriesvinyl reissues remastered with care and cut from the original analog tapesis reason for celebration. Fortunately, the batches come frequently. The latest releases, as I write in late October 2020, are very solid, musically and sonically.
Coincident stereo miking (footnote 1) has two advantages and one disadvantage. Its advantages are that it gives the most stable, specific imaging of any mike technique, and its outputs can be summed for mono reproduction without loss of quality. Its disadvantage is that, in most of its configurations, it tends to produce an overly narrow, shallow soundstage.