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With
the purchase of the legendary jazz label MPS, Edel Germany GmbH strengthens its
jazz catalog. For the first time the entire Jazz Portfolio of MPS will be
digitalized and simultaneously made available on a wide range of selected CD and
Vinyl releases. The team hopes to enter into the digital world, spreading
additional values and features centered around the cult status of the label on
the web. At the same time, a special MPS promotion team working with the label "Edel:
Content" plans selected MPS titles for their audiophile vinyl-series "AAA." The
reissue of 180g vinyl and artwork is done with strict attention to the original
releases. The sound of the original master-tapes is carefully optimized in a "pure
analog mastering process to free them from their traces of aging" in an effort
to meet the highest audiophile standard found today. As a starting
point, the Oscar Peterson-Box Exclusively for My Friends combines all six
original LPs from the series with a booklet that includes scans of the tape
boxes and liner notes of the audiophile re-mastering-process of AAA-producer
Dirk Sommer. Exclusively for My Friends is widely seen as the centerpiece of any
Oscar Peterson collection. Peterson himself went into raptures about the MPS
recordings, stating that, thanks to the intimate recording atmosphere in Hans
Georg Brunner-Schwer's living room and his pursuit of perfection as a sound
engineer and producer, they were among his best recordings. The private sessions
were made between 1963 and 1968 and are the result of the long-standing
friendship between the exceptional Canadian pianist and the MPS label owner from
the Black Forest. They serve to document Peterson's exquisite playing style in
high profile trios as well as Brunner-Schwer's determination to capture the best
sound possible. Oscar
Peterson And MPS The label was born in 1968. As co-owner of the electronics
manufacturer SABA, industrialist Hans Georg Brunner-Schwer (HGBS) was not only
an ardent audio engineer, he was also an amateur pianist. In 1958 he built a
recording studio above the living room in his villa that housed some of the most
sophisticated audio equipment available. When Oscar Peterson came to Zurich to
perform a concert in 1961, Brunner-Schwer lured Peterson to his home, and the
first house concert in the Black Forest took place. The Canadian pianist was so
impressed by HGBS's recording of the concert ("I never heard myself like this
before...") that he decided to come back every year for another living room
session. Verve's contract with Peterson prevented him from making studio
recordings with other producers, but private party sessions were deemed OK as
long as they were not released commercially while under contract. Once Peterson's
contract with Verve was up HGBS was able to release his recordings of Peterson
on his own label. Meanwhile, starting in 1963, HGBS began to produce records
under the label "SABA." The recordings included pianists Wolfgang Dauner and
Horst Jankowski. George Duke appeared as guest for the first time in 1966. The
Brazilian guitarist, Baden Powell, was also a featured artist. When Brunner-Schwer
left SABA in 1968, he founded MPS Records (Musik Produktion Schwarzwald / Music
Production Black Forest). The Peterson recordings were the first release under
the new name. It was the beginning of an illustrious catalogue which contained
some 500 releases by 1982. Eventually MPS expanded beyond Villingen to New York
and the Berlin Jazz Festival with such masterful sound engineers as Willi Fruth,
Rolph Donner and Joachim-Ernst Berendt.
A/A/A So what does that second "A" imply in this case? As an
aside, we might ask: Under what circumstances is the original mastering to two
tracks remastered at all - not counting, of course, simple copies of the
original to save wear and tear on that valuable source and from which many a
disc master is cut? So, what is MPS/Edel magician, Dirk Sommer, up to
here? Is he aiming for the closest master to the original tape? Or is he
re-mastering the original tape in order to look forward to a better master disc? Sommer makes it clear that he eschews all digital scrubbing
and EQ. He speaks of "removing of all traces of aging from the original MPS
tapes" and "meticulous analog optimizing of the tapes." So why am I concerned?
The answer is that the solutions I imagine all involve destructive interventions
as well as the addition of noise. So is this just hype, or is there something to
all this. On the enclosed liner notes Sommer is mum. In the absence of published
details, therefore, we have only the records - the new and the old - to speak
for themselves. And perhaps that's as it should be. What we do know is that the new LPs, just as with the early
Mobile Fidelity reissues, do not come off as exact replicas of the original
pressings. MFSL touted "half-speed mastering" which turned out to be a mixed
bag, and generally quieter vinyl. Presumably the master discs were cut directly
from the original master tapes. Not so here... I think.
In
General The box set "comes with an exclusive booklet that includes
scans of the tape boxes and liner notes of the audiophile remastering process
and AAA production by Dirk Sommer." I have to say "the new booklet"
scarcely qualifies as swag. it's the same size as the album covers, on thick
glossy paper stock and amounts to only eight pages - the cover page, which is a
reproduction of the master tape box; the back cover, which amounts to two long
paragraphs of carefully worded hype in German and English by Dirk Sommer (these
are the so-called "liner notes of the audiophile remastering process and AAA
production"); and the remaining six pages, replicas of the master tape box data.
They name the tracks and the personnel, yet doesn't tell us what the recording
dates are. In fact, the only date is the same for each page: 1968. Somehow, I
expected more and better, but it's the records which really count, so let's get
on with it.
Audio
Absolute And Compared After listening to all LPs in the new set and comparing
selectively against my original label pressings, I came to a surprising
conclusion: I believe recording producer/engineer Hans Georg Brunner-Schwer
knows what he's doing, but I am not all that much in accord with his intentions,
methods or results. It seems that HGBS is something of a tinkerer and has
balanced each track on every LP (save the solo album) differently to achieve a
more or less unique effect. Over here on In a
Mellow Tone from Mellow Mood
he wants a clear decisive, fulsome line from the double bass, but over there the
first two tracks of Action he
prefers fat, tuneless woof, as if the instrument were stuffed with a large, very
fluffy bath towel. Sometimes the drums are more forward, other times not. Over
here on Love is Here to Stay from The
Way I Really Play he
wants a big piano sound, but there on Satin
Doll again he wants a comparatively smallish, constrained instrument.
Here, more reverb - even on piano! – there, less. There is some consistency to
the drum kit sound, thankfully, while the piano at times, e.g. on Nica's
Dream from Mellow Mood,
suffers from "two-piano syndrome," whereby the two hands seem to be playing
entirely different instruments: the left, thick and wooly, the right snappy and
jingly, with an occasional tendency to ring on some of Oscar's whacking treble
attacks in the earlier two volumes, less in evidence on the reissues. The
two-piano syndrome is not attributable to the wide range of the instrument
itself or the venue. The new set, while retaining the basic characteristics of the
originals, relieves us of a few of their ills, but at the expense of some
openness. Despite this, articulation is always clean no matter how fast Oscar
plays, even when he makes with those mercurial runs with both hands in octaves.
Just as it was on the original issues, the drums are clear, though never felt
with the kind of energy we'd expect sitting in a living room, no matter how
large. Volumes II, III, V and VI come off best in this regard, as it does with
Sam Jones' bass, though there are, as noted, inconsistencies from track to
track. In his interview found in the liner notes on Action,
recording producer/engineer Hans Georg Brunner-Schwer reveals something that may
strike us nowadays as heresy (or, what record producers are all about, depending
on your point of view): "...it is at the changeovers that artistry is really
called for at the studio controls, because it is then that you have to find the
precise setting for the tone controls, the correct balance between the
instruments and, in particular, the right piano sound." I can see why and how he
does it that way considering the placement of the mikes as shown in the photos
for that album. But "tone controls" for the studio mix! Even if by that he means
"equalization" this is an anti-fidelity way of going about it. (There is a
telling photo on My Favorite Instrument of
HGBS and Oscar at a large suite of sliders, apparently a mixing board, which
probably tells the tale.) HGBS places a single mike close to the bass and another close
to the drums and positioning those two players – at Oscar's insistence, by the
way, so that he can hear properly and interact spontaneously with his colleagues
- behind and to one side of the piano. In this way he can manipulate the balance
in the studio so that the bass and drums sound decidedly on the left and the
piano on the right. Whether he captures the piano with an additional one or two
microphones, he is still going to have staging and timing difficulties, though
nothing like the impossibility of trying to mix recordings made at different
times and places while expecting a live result. [I am confident that a more
honest, more dynamic, and better staged and less problematic recording could
have captured with two well-placed mikes (yes, even in a living room) and all
the garbage a mixing console brings with it would have been avoided, but then,
he wouldn't have been able to effectively manipulate balances to taste.] The solo piano record, Volume IV My
Favorite Instrument, conveys a surprisingly convincing sound that
offers hints of a proper piano, but is oddly recorded so that the bass side of
the instrument is on the left and treble on the right. I suppose this is more or
less the way the pianist hears it, but the audience doesn't. It is doubtless
revealing that in the aforementioned interview HGBS says "I record the piano as
if I were sitting immediately by it, as if I were playing myself." Indeed, this
recording sounds as if he simply removed the lid and placed two microphones
above the instrument. The original disc mastering results in unrealistic
separation between the left and right channels, with the bass strings sounding
on the left and the treble strings on the right. This effect is more pronounced
on the I Concentrate on You/Moon River medley
on Girl Talk. The new mastering "corrects"
this to an extent. The recovery of the middle space is one of three areas
consistently improved (to my thinking) in the new set. By the way, on the
new records, the tape still slips for a few moments at the start of the first
side of The Way I Really Play, as
if the musicians began playing before the tape machine stabilized, and it never
quite settles down completely until the second track. How's that for
authenticity! Another overall, if subtle, improvement is the sense that disc
speed is more consistent throughout, that the record turns truer. It's like
having upgraded your turntable for the time being. The third improvement is
easily grasped and appreciated: the rediscovery of the middle - not just the
stage, but frequency response. From track to track we feel more like we are in
the presence of the same piano than we were with the originals. This comes with
a small but noticeable loss of air and spark. The music swings better on the
originals, but the sound is meatier on the reissues. I should note that the above seems to fly in the face of my Comparison
by Contrast method for critiquing differences between components.
What that method suggests is that the solution which reveals more differences is
less colored and therefore more accurate. However, the key here is that we are
dealing with two different sources, and it is quite possible that the new source
has been deliberately calculated to minimize those very differences that HGBS
wanted and/or achieved. The question may come down to a preference about
balance versus extension. You pays your money and makes your choices. Or, you
can have both, but not at the same time with the same record. It is my feeling that HGBS has some peculiarly primitive ideas
about the purpose of stereo reproduction with his adherence to isolation of
instruments and bass/treble effects. He believes strongly in the concept of
selective balancing of tracks, and he is not beyond tinkering to get what he
wants. Note the added bossa nova reverb to the drum kit at the start of Quiet
Nights on Travelin' On.
Clearly, Brunner-Schwer is not after truth, he is after his own idea
of what he wants this music to sound like, and in the original issues, he gets
it. In the new set, not as much.
Components
And Method As for the Black Label records, these strike me as
re-equalized in order to allow the melody from the piano to cut through. The
records in the new set are much more like the originals than the Black Labels,
though, by comparison, they seem more like closed-lid recordings. In fact, when
listening, my eyes naturally fall several feet to a line between the middle of
my speakers instead of some distance above them. As previously mentioned, in the
new set as compared to the originals, there is a more complete sense of stage,
left-to-right, and a more evenly balanced center-fill of the frequency response.
However, our listening panels felt a relative absence of overtones. Was this the
result of the process of "age-removal" or copy to a second generation master, or
just a natural loss over time of magnetic detail, I can't say. On the other
hand, since some of this was evident in the originals as well, we can safely
attribute much of this effect to HGBS's mixing console and draconian efforts to
balance bass and drums to the piano. What is reassuring, and frankly a little
amazing, is that, despite Brunner-Schwer's need to exercise his personal
engineering facility, the feel of a live performance remains more or less
intact.
Recommendation As Dirk Sommer is quick to point out, these recordings are
more valuable for their musical merit than as examples of the recording art, and
I think a frank critique of the original issues at the time would have so
stated, despite MPS liner notes that declare HGBS as the greatest thing to
happen to jazz recording since the avocado pit. That said, these new reissues
are eminently listenable and engaging recordings and, despite their relative
lack of airy energy, they feel alive and spontaneous. In any case, they have
power and muscle to spare, and there is little if any evidence of tape damage or
distortion in the grittier sense. Once we give up our unrealistic expectations
for engineering magic, our foot taps and our hearts soar like a hawk (with
thanks to Old Lodge Skins), and the spirit and artistry of Oscar Peterson comes
through vividly – like he's right there in your living room... sort of. It may seem that I don't much care for these records, new or
old, since my notion of what recordings should be about differs so much with
this producer. Not true. Not at all. I don't really expect accuracy from
recordings however much I crave it. The issue here is: despite the described
discrepancy as I see it, do I find pleasure? Am I engaged? The answer is a
resounding "Yes.!" So if you have clean copies of the originals, I think you
shouldn't replace them on any account, and oughtn't feel any rush to pick up the
Edel/MPS set unless you simply can't resist these sorts of things. On the other
hand, if you have these recordings in any other media or your originals aren't
up to snuff, I urge you to gobble up this new LP set without delay. You can find
outlets on-line in the States and overseas for $30-40 per volume, plus shipping,
so shop wisely.
MPS/Edel Box Set Deluxe Box Set with 6 individual LP's
1. At Long Last Love
1. On a Clear Day
1. Waltzing Is Hip
1. Someone To Watch Over Me
1. In A Mellotone
1. Travelin' On
Performance: Enjoyment: Recording Quality:
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