Discussion on Alec R Costandinos CD's, We Must Get These To Happen within the Disco Music of the 70s and 80s forums, part of the General Music Discussions at DiscoMusic.com category; Ok, Well i've talked about those horrable russian bootlegg Alec CD's made from not the best condition vinyl and the ...
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#1
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| Ok, Well i've talked about those horrable russian bootlegg Alec CD's made from not the best condition vinyl and the bad editing and attempted mastering (beware, they are all on Ebay again), I myself have been working on a project this past week putting Alec's LP's to CD and i found that using an EQ and pure mint vinyl, it sounds very very close to being a real CD. Now, why Alec will not have his stuff on CD, still beats me. However, i heard that Romeo And Juliet was avalible on CD out of Japan at one time and some places still have some copys hanging around. Does anyone know if this was i decent remaster? Like actually sounding pure CD? I know that very rare loooooong gone Unidisc release of Alec had very poorly mastered stuff. Romeo And Juliet has alot of tape hiss and is also pitched waaaaay too fast, about maybe +1 up from as fast as they pitched the 4 min edit. So, does anyone know if this Japan release was good or not? The only Alec for sure that i know was avalible was at one time the Alec/Tina Turner "Love Explosion" LP and still avalible is "Love In C Minor". DJ Jimmy M
__________________ Fly By Night, Sleep In The Daytime |
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#2
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| Hello DJ Jimmy M: I purchased these japanese CD from Alec Costandinos and it sounds fantastic to me. I think it was remastered from the original tapes. I do not hear any hiss... It is released throught Philips in Japan. Cheers. |
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#3
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| Was it pitched fast on this CD? Like the 4 min edit? or is it good normal pitch? Jimmy M
__________________ Fly By Night, Sleep In The Daytime |
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#4
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| Hello Sorry that my reply took so long. I am not shure if the pitch was changed. The recording company is the japanese Philips,distributed by Mercury/Polygram KK (another japanese enterprise) with the Ibis Records Inc copyrights (which was the original Alec's company) The track time are: Acts I & II -> 15:32 Acts III, IV & V -> 16:57, which may give you an idea about the pitch. I do not have any complain about the sound quality. Hope this helped. Cheers, |
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#5
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| Ok, Did you read the time off the CD cover? Or is that how it regesters on the CD Player itself? If you got that time off the CD Player itself by putting the CD in then...it's pitched too fast. At normal pitch it should be: Act 1&2 (15:37) Act 3,4,5 (17:14) Thats how it reads on my CD Player having it played at the right normal pitch from my LP that i put onto a CD. Check the CD Player reading if you got this off of the cover and please let me know. If you listen to the 6:?? edit of Romeo And Juliet on the Disco Nights vol 3: The Best Of Eurodisco CD, that is the proper pitch. DJ Jimmy M
__________________ Fly By Night, Sleep In The Daytime |
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#6
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| Hello DJ Jimmy M: The track time was read at display of the CD player, not at the CD cover. Yes, it seems a little bit over pitched (a hope that this exists), but see: From 15:32 to 15:37 it's only +0.54% From 16:57 to 17:14 it's only +1.67% Hope this helped. Cheers, <font size=-1>[ This Message was edited by: rhessel on 2002-07-06 20:33 ]</font> |
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#7
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| Well, Thats a bit better than the unidisc one which is pitched at about +2 1/2. I wonder why they play it faster? It kinda ruins the aspect Alec set for the track, hmmmmm, anyway, yes that answered all my questions and I might pick it up if i can find a copy and see if maybe i could slow the disc down somehow and transfer it to a blank disc. Dunno anything about CD pitching, im a turntablist. Anyway, thanx. DJ Jimmy M
__________________ Fly By Night, Sleep In The Daytime |
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#8
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#9
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| Well unidisc has improved since that early CD. The 3 other discs i have of theirs are fine which are: Patrick Cowley - Megatron Man France Joli - Come To Me Saint Tropez - Je T'aime What i was wondering is why "Romeo And Juliet" always gets pitched fast? The only re release that isnt is the 6:?? edit on the Disco Nights Vol. 3 CD. DJ Jimmy M
__________________ Fly By Night, Sleep In The Daytime |
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#10
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DJ Jimmy M, if you're still around: I recently picked up a US copy of Romeo & Juliet, and I think side two is actually a bit slower than it should be. I have the original French pressing on Ibis, as well as a Canadian copy on RCA, and they both sound a bit faster than the Casablanca release. I'll do some in-depth testing later on... a good reference point would be to compare against a digital tone and see which one(s) more closely match an actual 12-tone key. This is how I determined that the album version of "Mondo Disco" is the wrong speed, and the 12" is correct. _________________ Or, as they say in the classics: "I've never seen a man eat so many chicken wings!" <font size=-1>[ This Message was edited by: Graham Start on 2002-08-21 18:18 ]</font> |
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#11
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| Sorry to get off the subject somewhat, but I recall that the spelling of Costandinos' last name was discussed in another old post. I was playing the Love De-Luxe "Here Comes That Sound" LP tonight, and I noticed for the first time that a dedication on the back reads: "With thanks, love and affection to Alec CoNstandinos for believing in me.--Hawk" (Alan Hawkshaw). So I guess this incorrect spelling is fairly common.
__________________ \"...a once in a lifetime feeling that returns every week...\" |
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#12
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#13
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| The differences in pitch could easily be explained by the tape recorders used having slightly different speeds. Don't forget, in the analogue days, machinery could go out of alignement quite easily and +/- 0.5% was well within pro specs so far as speed was concerned. I think you're worrying too much. |
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#14
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| Exactly my point. The thing is, I'm looking into buying a lower-end "audiophile" turntable, and *none* of them have pitch control. The word that I got from a hardcore audiophile friend of mine was this: "Pitch controls are frowned upon by the High-End audiophile crowd for two reasons: The first is that you shouldn't have either the need or latitude to monkey with the essential nature of the recording, and one assumes that decent recordings worthy of good playback technology SHOULD NOT need to have their pitch re-adjusted by the home listener! The second dovetails into the first reason: The pitch control adds extra complexity and cost to the turntable. It doesn't improve sound quality, it is a correction mechanism for faulty recordings, usually low-budget sonic abominations from the stone age of music reproduction (most people would think, Pitch adjustment requirement=You're taping a bunch of old 1923 mono acoustical 78's or those 160rpm Edison cylinders that are even older still???)" Yet in my experience, records cut at a slightly off pitch aren't all that uncommon. I've got about half a dozen that I know of. And it isn't just poor production quality control that can cause this. The most infamous example of this being Miles Davis' landmark "Kind Of Blue" LP, of which all copies made before 1995 have one side playing almost a semitone off. Of course, I can also correct pitch digitally after recording to hard disk, but this introduces all sorts of resampling artifacts. I've heard stories of people modding Technics 1200s to get decent sound out of them... maybe I should look into that. _________________ Or, as they say in the classics: "I've never seen a man eat so many chicken wings!" <font size=-1>[ This Message was edited by: Graham Start on 2002-08-22 11:01 ]</font> |
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#15
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| Not to push the point too far, but all 12" records from the classic Disco era will be slightly too fast or too slow and therefore slightly out of pitch. imagine this scenario: Master 16 or 24 track is 0.5% slow Master 2 track is 0.5% slow Cutting Lathe is 0.5% slow Therefore pressed discs 1.5% slow, compared to actual pitch of music as played in the studio. The opposite would be just as possible. Of course in the real world, even 0.5% would have been pretty accurate speed, so far as anyone was concerned and would not unduly worry an engineer's ears. The thing was that all gear was either slightly fast or slow, so with any luck the variations more or less cancelled each other out. Add in accumulated distortion and Wow and flutter, the distortion of a stylus being dragged across the grooves in the record and it's awonder they sounded as good as they did. I personally have never heard a CD that sounded worse than the vinyl, especially when it comes to hiss and RUMBLE. 12" records have a dynamic range of about 35dB in real life, and that ain't much. |
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