Thursday, September 10, 2009

Review: Remastered Beatles delicious sweet to the ear


Mono sets can be a revelation for some, but even in the box, stereo album - the most famous versions, and the focus of sales - is a step forward from 22 years the first release of the CD-ROM.

Want proof?

Check out "Lovely Rita" from 1967's "Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band".

Intro shimmering guitars, followed by Paul McCartney Soaring "Aaaaaaaahhhhhhhhhh offer" bouncy bass line and John Lennon and George Harrison's smirky vocals, tasty ear candy that does not rot your teeth.

Many other acoustic pleasures come to the surface more often than they did in ancient times, vinyl and cassettes of the processing plant.

Harrison surprisingly cheerful-sounding sitar, which mimics the melody of John Lennon's "Norwegian Wood (This Bird Has Flown)," From 1965's "Rubber Soul", is much clearer. Examine the graph of the "Beatles" for decades

Rat Ringo Starr's drum sound of the muscles on "Rain", since 1966, new sounds. Multitracked harmony "Because" from 1969's "Abbey Road", flickering.

Remastering good work, also expands the band's sound from their early days, when the overdubs and studio tricks were kept to a minimum. IReport: You Beatle Maniac?

Listen to the band's debut album, 1963's "Please Please Me" (mostly written in one-day session), all of this, but it feels like being in a musty studio to see them perform these songs.

Lennon, sore throat screamed (literally and figuratively) on the last album, "Twist And Shout", never sounded more sandpapery - and this is meant as a compliment. Read about the engineers who worked on the renewal

Another full-fledged rockers, who cries-It-Up Motown cover "Money (That's What I Want)" (from 1963 with "The Beatles") and one of Sir Paul-Take a vocal explosion of "Little Richard Long Tall Sally" 1964 () and shake the walls.

If you need to know that it would be to take up the Beatles Cavern Club in their pre-fame days to play these songs at a very high volume. Just make sure your neighbors do not mind.

But it is possible for 1966's "Revolver" once crowned the greatest recordings of all time Rolling Stone, where the mysteries of work Abbey Road engineer Guy Massey and many others involved are the most obvious.
Horn of McCartney's Sassy-copper "Got To Get You Into My Life" sounds like an explosion, and its per-Tender-on-Touch-ballad "Here, There and Everywhere" peacefully floating in the air. George Harrison, three tracks (especially "I want to tell you, and bite opening track" Taxman ") was even more impressive, thanks to the work of the new paint.

The ringing guitars on "And Your Bird can sing" takes Lennon's clear texts splendor Technicolor. "Closed Revolver's track, John" Tomorrow Never Knows ", the full tape loops and witchcraft from the mixer, this journey. (And it is not surprising, given medicinal aid descent.)

Material on the Beatles continue to inspire, while people have to listen to music. These new windows will be along with the video game Rock Band, no doubt, will present a catalog of NOK younger generation.

New listeners are likely to jump to instinctively: I took my 5 year old son to see McCartney in concert last month, and when "Drive My Car" opened the show, he was air guitaring along with their senior colleagues.

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