Shortcake Has Berry on Top

This 1978 set, featuring cornetist/arranger Bill Berry, backed by some of L.A.\\'s top jazz musicians, offers a time capsule into a not too distant past when both Pablo and Concord Records documented a still vital recording and gigging Southern California jazz scene that I\\'m not sure still exists. Players include many familiar jazz veterans such as Lew Tabackin (tenor sax/flutes), Bill Watrous (trombone), Dave Frishberg (piano), Monty Budwig (bass), and Frankie Capp (drums).

Primary Category: 
Category: 
Artist: 
Bill Berry
Album: 
Shortcake
Cred Label: 
Pure Audiophile Records PA-004, 2 180g LPs
Cred Prod: 
Carl E. Jefferson
Cred Eng: 
Phil Edwards
Cred Mix: 
Phil Edwards
Cred Mast: 
Stan Ricker at The Audiophile Mastering Room

This 1978 set, featuring cornetist/arranger Bill Berry, backed by some of L.A.'s top jazz musicians, offers a time capsule into a not too distant past when both Pablo and Concord Records documented a still vital recording and gigging Southern California jazz scene that I'm not sure still exists. Players include many familiar jazz veterans such as Lew Tabackin (tenor sax/flutes), Bill Watrous (trombone), Dave Frishberg (piano), Monty Budwig (bass), and Frankie Capp (drums).

Beastie Boys Love New York

A nice return to form has been achieved. While I thought their last album, Hello Nasty, was lacking compared to the groundbreaking holy trinity of Paul\\'s Boutique, Check Your Head and Ill Communication, To the 5 Boroughs brings back some tasty examples of why the boys will go down in musical history as Rap-Rock trailblazers.

Primary Category: 
Category: 
Artist: 
Beastie Boys
Album: 
To The 5 Boroughs
Cred Label: 
Capitol Records CDP 72435 84571 00 CD/LP
Cred Prod: 
Beastie Boys
Cred Eng: 
DURO, Beastie Boys & Jon Weiner
Cred Mix: 
Supa
Cred Mast: 
Chris Athens at Sterling Sound

A nice return to form has been achieved. While I thought their last album, Hello Nasty, was lacking compared to the groundbreaking holy trinity of Paul's Boutique, Check Your Head and Ill Communication, To the 5 Boroughs brings back some tasty examples of why the boys will go down in musical history as Rap-Rock trailblazers.

Stunning Byrds 45rpm Box Set From Sundazed

Wow! Leave it to Sundazed to pull off the ultimate Christmas gift for Byrdmaniax-not that any of them will wait until then to devour this quintuple 45rpm box set. All of these A and B sides were originally conceived of as the “next” Byrds single, but for one reason or another, were shelved. Now Sundazed has resurrected them with fabulous sound and impeccable, sumptuous packaging.

Primary Category: 
Category: 
Artist: 
The Byrds
Album: 
Cancelled Flights
Cred Label: 
Sundazed PV5 72860/S7001, 5 45 rpm mono singles box set
Cred Prod: 
Bob Irwin and Roger McGuinn
Cred Eng: 
various
Cred Mix: 
Terry Melcher
Cred Mast: 
Bob Irwin

Wow! Leave it to Sundazed to pull off the ultimate Christmas gift for Byrdmaniax-not that any of them will wait until then to devour this quintuple 45rpm box set. All of these A and B sides were originally conceived of as the “next” Byrds single, but for one reason or another, were shelved. Now Sundazed has resurrected them with fabulous sound and impeccable, sumptuous packaging.

New Crosby/Nash Duet Album Is First Since 1976's Whistling Down the Wire

The first studio album proper by the duet since 1976\\'s Whistling Down The Wire, Crosby-Nash - a two-CD set - is an interesting, intriguing and overall thoughtful affair. To say something like that it reflects the \\'lives in the balance\\' vibe that we are all surrounded by here in 2004 through the minds of these two firebrands would be accurate, but there\\'s more, much more.

Primary Category: 
Category: 
Artist: 
David Crosby and Graham Nash
Album: 
Crosby-Nash
Cred Label: 
Sanctuary (BMG) 06076-84683-2, 2 CDs
Cred Prod: 
Nathaniel Kunkel, Russ Kunkel, Graham Nash and David Crosby
Cred Eng: 
Nathaniel Kunkel
Cred Mix: 
Nathaniel Kunkel
Cred Mast: 
Douglas Sax and Robert Hadley at The Mastering Lab

The first studio album proper by the duet since 1976's Whistling Down The Wire, Crosby-Nash - a two-CD set - is an interesting, intriguing and overall thoughtful affair. To say something like that it reflects the 'lives in the balance' vibe that we are all surrounded by here in 2004 through the minds of these two firebrands would be accurate, but there's more, much more.

"King" Cole Classic on S&P Vinyl Better Than the Original Pressing

This 1957 classic, an early LP concept album filled with break- up songs, has always sounded better in mono because Capitol had a bad habit back then of tacking on way too much echo to stereo mixes. Hoffman remixed from the original 3 track master tape, cutting way back on the reverb to produce a positively stunning studio document from the golden age of analog recording.

Despite the potentially maudlin subject matter, the Billy May arrangements are brash, brassy and filled with playful musical surprises. Check out the growling, pants-flapping tubas on “Once in a While.”

Primary Category: 
Category: 
Artist: 
Nat "King" Cole
Album: 
Just One of Those Things
Cred Label: 
S&P-508 180g LP
Cred Prod: 
Lee Gillette
Cred Eng: 
John Krauss
Cred Mix: 
Steve Hoffman
Cred Mast: 
Steve Hoffman and Kevin Gray

This 1957 classic, an early LP concept album filled with break- up songs, has always sounded better in mono because Capitol had a bad habit back then of tacking on way too much echo to stereo mixes. Hoffman remixed from the original 3 track master tape, cutting way back on the reverb to produce a positively stunning studio document from the golden age of analog recording.

Dolby Makes Noise

Englishman Dolby hit double paydirt with a catchy synth-novelty song and an accompanying video just as the pop-synth and music video/ MTV phenomena broke. However, “She Blinded Me With Science” was not his first song, nor does it really reflect what the guy\\'s about. His first album, The Golden Age of Wireless (Harvest ST-12203), was originally issued without “She Blinded Me…”. When the song and video became popular, the album was reconfigured and reissued.

Primary Category: 
Category: 
Artist: 
Thomas Dolby
Album: 
Forty
Cred Label: 
Salz 014 LP (Germany)
Cred Prod: 
Thomas Dolby
Cred Eng: 
Todd Wollersheim
Cred Mix: 
Thomas Dolby and Matt Levine
Cred Mast: 
no LP mastering credit

Englishman Dolby hit double paydirt with a catchy synth-novelty song and an accompanying video just as the pop-synth and music video/ MTV phenomena broke. However, “She Blinded Me With Science” was not his first song, nor does it really reflect what the guy's about. His first album, The Golden Age of Wireless (Harvest ST-12203), was originally issued without “She Blinded Me…”. When the song and video became popular, the album was reconfigured and reissued. Dolby was an instant celeb, and faded just as quickly, though his album Aliens Ate My Buick (EMI Manhattan E-148075) remains a cult fave for both music and sound. Come to think of it The Flat Earth was pretty good as well.

Luka Bloom's Latest is a Real Snooze-Fest

Usually an aggressive Irish folkie with a penchant for some mad strumming, Mr. Bloom delivers a real snoozer on this 9 song set. If it puts you to sleep Bloom will be happy, for that is his intent.



After suffering a painful bout of tendonitis last year, Bloom was forced to curtail his performing and playing, managing only soft strums and gentle picking on a Spanish guitar. He became enamored of the soft style after a while, and began writing songs to capture the mood, singing them in a near whisper.

Primary Category: 
Category: 
Artist: 
Luka Bloom
Album: 
Before Sleep Comes
Cred Label: 
Bar None BRNCD161 CD
Cred Prod: 
Luka Bloom
Cred Eng: 
Mark Gavin
Cred Mix: 
Brian Masterson
Cred Mast: 
Brian Masterson

Usually an aggressive Irish folkie with a penchant for some mad strumming, Mr. Bloom delivers a real snoozer on this 9 song set. If it puts you to sleep Bloom will be happy, for that is his intent.

Roger McGuinn Interview

TA: Let's go on the 5D era then, if we could. This is a major point of change for you guys. Your two primary sources of material, Gene Clark and then Bob Dylan were not on the record. Did you decide consciously not to do any more Dylan stuff for this record?

RM: I think maybe we got too much flack for doing too many Dylan songs.

David Crosby Can Remember His Name and a Great Deal More Part 2

TA: Are you interested in the studio side of things, or do you just see it as a means to an end?

DC: I've been forced to get into it because I love the sound. I love making sounds. I love making it sound wonderful That's why If Only I Could Remember My Name sounded the way it did. That's me without any restraints or anybody in the way, you know? I am not a very good "tekkie" but I can hear fairly well and it's not too hard to figure stuff out. I've done things like running analog and digital off of the same recording (mic feed) and then really listening.

TA: And what did you come up with?

DC: I still like analog. I still would rather cut my tracks, anyway, on a Studer.

TA: And why is that?

DC: Two things: one transients, and the way that it handles them, you know? When a kick drum or something sort of shocks the tape, it behaves differently on the two different system but mostly overtone structures, harmonics.

David Crosby Can Remember His Name...and a Great Deal More Part 1

The Tracking Angle Interview: David Crosby

TA: Let's begin with If I Could Only Remember My Name , your first solo album. It won some awards for sound quality. You once were quoted as saying the engineer Steve Barncord did a really good job. Do you think that a record like that could be made and released today?

DC: Probably not. Things have changed in the field. It's not as loose as it was then. Nowadays, if it isn't a clone of whatever's at the top of the charts, it's very hard to get anybody to pay any attention to it at all. We (CSN&Y) had just gotten through doing Déjà vu, you know? And I had more stuff and I was just having fun in the studio. It was the only place that I was really happy right then. That was not long after that girl had gotten killed that was my old lady, and so the studio was my refuge. I would hang out there and all my friends that were loose on any given night would wind up there. It was very self-indulgent, but we had no push, there was no pressure so we could do anything that I could think of. That's not true these days. Nowadays, the prices are so huge and the game is so distorted that winning is what matters and MTV has changed it to where theatrical acts win more than musical acts. Smoke bombs and costumes, you know, how much rage you can seem to express and anything to cut through the fog. It has very little to do with music. But that was a very musical album. I think if it came out now, it would fail.

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