New JVC XRCD Music Reviews
We have a half dozen new xrcd2 releases
auditioned this time around. They retain the format's position of being in
almost every case the highest fidelity digital version of the original recording
- be it originally analog or digital in nature - while still using the standard
44.1kHz sampling rate approach which is now skirting obsolescence. That also means
no special equipment or decoding of any sort is required for playback. JVC does
it by fussing over and polishing every little step in the journey from the
original tapes or discs all the way to the final pressing, resulting in the
preservation of the maximum resolution possible - true 16-bit - without the bit
loss along the way due to most processing chains.
MOUSSORGSKY-RAVEL:
Pictures at an Exhibition - Chicago Symphony Orch./Fritz Reiner - BMG/JVC
JMCXR-0016:
I just compared this audiophile classic with two competing new SACD releases.
(See Hi-Res Reviews.) It didn't take a back seat by any means. This has to be
the most dynamic, powerful and rich version of the warhorse of them all, and the
spot-on playing by the expert Chicago musicians under the stern baton of Reiner
is a good part of the package. Reiner's pacing is more deliberate than most
other versions, with dramatic pauses here and there. The xrcd has just as much
clarity to my ears as the Classic Records 33-LP version (but they still sound
different). Only 33 minutes length with no filler of any sort.
MAHLER:
Symphony No. 4 - Lisa Della Casa, sop./Chicago Symphony Orch./Fritz Reiner -
BMG/JVC JMCXR-0017:
Another Golden Age LP classic remastered from the l958 session taped in
Chicago's Orchestra Hall. In his liner notes from the original album reproduced
in xrcd notes, Reiner admits that he never knew Mahler or saw him conduct, but
that he did begin his conducting career in the same city that Mahler had started
in. This melodic and moving symphony can provide a good starting point for
Mahler newbies. The fourth movement is a setting of a poem from The Youth's
Magic Horn, and Della Casa's voice is not only gorgeous but gorgeously
reproduced.
FRANCK: Symphony in D Minor - Boston Symphony Orch./Charles Munch -
BMG/JVC JMCXR-0018:
This even earlier Victor recording session took place in Boston's Symphony
Hall in March of l957. This was a year before the stereodisc was introduced, but
Victor had been taping on a three-channel Ampex for some time already and had
released prerecorded open-reel half-track stereo tapes. (Several of which I
still have and still sound terrific.) The D Minor is one of the most
approachable Romantic symphonies around for the classical tenderfoot - full of
great tunes and an easily-groked symphonic structure based on Franck's cyclical
return of the same basic theme. (I can't resist mentioning again the person I
was "tape-sponding" with decades ago, who excitedly told me about the
wonderful record he'd just purchased by "Ceasar Frank and his
Symphony.") Both due to the different acoustics of Boston's hall and
Munch's conducting style, this recording has a more flowing, homogenized sound
than Reiner's. And that's all to the good for Franck's music.
- John Sunier
Jacintha
- Lush Life (with Bill Cunliffe, piano and arrangements; Darek Oles, bass; Joe
LaBarbera, drums; Dmitri Matheny, flugelhorn; Anthony Wilson, guitar, Frankie
Marocco, accordion) - Groove Note/JVC JVCXR 0217-2:
This was the third album for Groove Note by the lush-voiced singer from
Singapore, released just last year in LP and standard CD format and more
recently on SACD (See March Hi-Res Reviews). For the first time a background of
strings has been added, giving Jacintha an even more sensuous overall sound than
previously. The thorough classical music education of arranger Cunliffe shows in
the supportive but imaginative backing offered by the string section. Cunliffe
admitted to reimagining some of the impressionistic effects wrought by Delius,
Vaughan Williams and Rachmaninoff in their music. This is not like some
singer-with strings albums where you're wishing the vocalist would just return
to his or her normal piano-bass-drums backing. The contributions of three
terrific sidemen - Matheny, Wilson and Marocco - are not to be ignored, and
Cunliffe delivers some tasty piano solo work. The realism and presence of
Jacintha's lovely voice is something to hear, a definite enhancement over the
original CD, about equal to the LP (but, again, different), and expectedly,
slightly below the SACD version as regards transparency, detail and
"air." (Also, the xrcd version fails to provide the 15 sexy photos of
Jacintha that come with the others.) Tracks: The Boulevard of Broken Dreams,
Black Coffee, Summertime, Lush Life, Mahna de Carneval, The Shadow of Your
Smile, When the World Was Young, September Song, Harlem Nocturne, Smile.
- John Henry
Stan
Getz with Cal Tjader (plus Billy Higgins, Scott LaFaro, Vince Guaraldi &
Eddie Duran) - Fantasy/JVC JVCXR-0218-2:
Some of the greatest West Coast jazz players of the late 50s jammed their
hearts out in this l958 San Francisco studio session for Fantasy. It resulted
from a stint at the famous Black Hawk jazz club by Getz' quartet during a time
when Tjader - who lived in the area - was taking time off and forming a new
group of his own. As Ralph J. Gleason reported in his liner notes to the
original LP, Getz blended with vibist Tjader as though they had played together
for years, and the session was over in record time. Not all sessions were being
recorded in stereo in l958 - the year the stereodisc was introduced, but this
one was, fortunately. It's all here, with a clarity the original LP never had -
including the exaggerated separation of instruments to show off the stereo.
Tracks; Ginza Samba, I've Grown Accustomed to Her Face, For All We Know, Crows
Nest, Liz Anne, Big Bear, My Buddy.
Oscar Peterson & Dizzy Gillespie - Pablo/JVC JVCXR-0219-2:
I someone missed this one back in l975, though I don't know how, being
extremely partial to bare-bones jazz duos like this - free of the usual rhythm
section. Oscar just sat down and started improvising on seven mostly standards
plus an extended free-for-all blues, and Diz just wailed on this trumpet. No
special arrangements, no other sidemen, just two of jazz' supreme geniuses doin'
their thing unencumbered. Diz especially sounds right in your lap - amazing
presence not heard on most of his recordings with his groups. The tempi range
all over the place, not stuck in a comfortable middle tempo that would be the
easy way out in the absence of a rhythm section. Another interesting aspect
here, as pointed out in Benny Green's fine liner notes (unreadable in the
reproduction of the original LP liner but helpfully re-printed in normal-sized
type) is that many of the tunes move back and forth between major and minor
keys. That's like catnip for me - love that feeling. Not all the jazz classics
chosen by some reissue labels are really classics, but this one couldn't be more
of a classic. Tracks: Caravan, Mozambique, Autumn Leaves, Close Your Eyes, Blues
for Bird, Dizzy Atmosphere, Alone Together, Con Alma.
- John Henry