Neil Young: CD vs. LP

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I recall hearing in the past that Neil Young has personally expressed a dislike for the mastering jobs that had been done on his analog albums in order to bring them out on CD. I'm a big fan of his analog-era work, and have all of the pre-'80's releases on vinyl. I haven't picked up any of these titles on CD yet, and was wondering if anyone had actually done a personal sonic comparison between the albums and their CD versions and could offer any insight on differences that they might have observed. Thanks in advance.

Nom De Plume (Nom De Plume), Thursday, 31 July 2003 20:00 (twenty years ago) link

as a pretty huge neil fan, id say stick to vinyl if you can, the ones i have on cd ive mostly ended up seeking out on vinyl just for better sound. been listening to "comes a time" a lot on vinyl lately, and although i usually dig neil's more loose ragged side compared to his more produced records, i now really love this record, listening to it on vinyl, its so fucking beautiful.

Bob Shaw (Bob Shaw), Thursday, 31 July 2003 20:15 (twenty years ago) link

this might be informative, I read it two weeks ago and it made me slightly (just slightly) less joyful about acquiring "On the Beach" [K54014...] last April... Guess I'll buy the cd reissue pretty soon.

willem (willem), Thursday, 31 July 2003 22:14 (twenty years ago) link

eighteen years pass...

Ever since Neil yanked his music from Spotify a few months ago, I've been spinning my Neil vinyl more than ever (realizing that in recent years I've relied too much on streaming out of laziness/convenience). Not only do the LPs sound fantastic, but as a result I've really come to appreciate the high quality of the packaging of his 70s records on Reprise, especially on Time Fades Away through Zuma. Large foldout inserts/lyric sheets; custom printed inner sleeves; and luxe outer sleeves, e.g. Tonight's The Night's heavy blotter paper gatefold, Zuma's thick matte cardboard, Time Fades Away's black interior and unusual vertical orientation; and On The Beach's interior printed with the floral pattern from the umbrella on the cover.

It's basically the Same Situation with Joni Mitchell's mid-70s records on Reprise (embossed gatefold covers on Court and Spark, Hissing..., and Hejira, primo art direction by hers truly).

So I'm wondering: Was this high-end packaging standard practice for Reprise at the time, or was it reserved for its high-profile Canadian singer/songwriters?

J. Sam, Monday, 23 May 2022 17:19 (one year ago) link

The seemed to be a common feature of popular Laurel Canyon artists at the time. I can't pinpoint it to one label, though many of them became WEA labels (Atlantic, Asylum, etc.)

Check out the faux-leather cardboard of CSN&Y's Déjà Vu or the Eagles' embossed Their Greatest Hits (1971-1975) and I think some of Jackson Browne's albums. Even the ink colors can be impressive. All nice to look at even if I wasn't a fan of some of them.

Before the vinyl revival, DCC Compact Classics was especially good at re-creating the sleeve art, even for their gold CD releases, going out of their way to get good paper stock, the right inks, the original photo negatives where applicable, and even the embossing. I remember getting Court & Spark on their gold CD and thinking "whoah, is this how the sleeve is supposed to be?"

birdistheword, Monday, 23 May 2022 18:04 (one year ago) link

fear of music is another high profile one, on another WEA-related label.

its such a cool and and evocative thing that seems to be largely gone. in my head, tonights the night is totally inseparable from the feel of that jacket & paper.

nobody like my rap (One Eye Open), Monday, 23 May 2022 18:20 (one year ago) link

That reminds me, Stevie Wonder used to have braille in his liner notes. (IIRC Rhino's beautifully designed Ray Charles box set Genius & Soul - The 50th Anniversary Collection also had braille in its liner notes.)

With a few exceptions I think the CD era killed so much of that with standardized packaging. Once in a while you got something like Prince's hologram cover or Pet Shop Boys' Very (or the patchouli in Madonna's Like a Prayer), but otherwise I get the impression that universal utilitarian features like a jewel case and a booklet that can easily fit into the tabs made it trickier to do anything with packaging materials.

birdistheword, Monday, 23 May 2022 19:10 (one year ago) link


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