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Showing posts with label Kris Fredricksson Remasters. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Kris Fredricksson Remasters. Show all posts

Saturday, 22 April 2017

"Sheer Heart Attack: 2011 Digital Remaster 2CD Deluxe Edition" by QUEEN (March 2011 Island Records 2-Disc Reissue) - A Review by Mark Barry...





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"…Dynamite With A Laser Beam…"

The first 1986 CD reissue, the 1991 Hollywood version from the USA, the 1993 UK variant – and now this '2011 Digital Remaster' – yet another definitive version tapping Queen's lucrative back catalogue - this time on Island Records.

Their breakthrough 3rd album on EMI Records has had (like most huge titles from the period) its fair share of recomboozalated whirls on the old digital merry-go-round. But this latest wallet-tempter for Queen fans has to be the best – at least sonically – although I find that the visuals are once again naught to write home about...

First of all - the '2011 Digital Remaster' comes in two variants – the single European CD version on Island Records 276 440 9 (Barcode 602527644097) with just the 13-track album. The one I want to concentrate on is its big brother – the 2CD 'Deluxe Edition' with a Bonus EP of 5-tracks as Disc 2. Here are the tenement funsters...

UK and Europe released March 2011 - "Sheer Heart Attack: 2011 Digital Remaster 2CD Deluxe Edition" by QUEEN on Island Records 276 441 1 (Barcode 602527644110) is a CD + BONUS EP Reissue/Remaster and breaks down as follows:

Disc 1 (39:08 minutes):
1. Brighton Rock [Side 1]
2. Killer Queen
3. Tenement Funster
4. Flick Of The Wrist
5. Lily Of The Valley
6. Now I'm Here
7. In The Lap Of The Gods [Side 2]
8. Stone Cold Crazy
9. Dear Friends
10. Misfire
11. Bring Back That Leroy Brown
12. She Makes Me (stormtrooper in stilettos)
13. In The Lap Of The Gods...revisited
Tracks 1 to 13 are their 3rd studio album "Sheer Heart Attack" - released November 1974 in the UK on EMI Records EMC 3061 and in the USA on Elektra 7E-1026. Produced by QUEEN and ROY THOMAS BAKER – it peaked at No. 2 in the UK and No. 12 in the USA

Disc 2 BONUS EP (15:48 minutes):
1. Now I’m Here (Live At The Hammersmith Odeon, December 1975)
2. Flick Of The Wrist (BBC Session, October 1974)
3. Tenement Funster (BBC Session, October 1974)
4. Bring Back That Leroy Brown (A Cappella Mix 2011)
5. In The Lap Of The Gods... revisited (Live At Wembley Stadium, July 1986)

The round-cornered 'super jewel case' certainly looks the part but in truth I find them bloody awkward to use. At least the 16-page booklet is a better affair than previous - new period photos of the band - the lyrics to the songs that were on the inner bag are here too as are track-by-track explanations of the BONUS EP by GREG BROOKS and GARY TAYLOR. But there's no history of the album - no rare foreign picture sleeves for this most collectable of bands - no reminiscences or input from surviving members of the band... It's good but hardly great and visually feels about as special as used Pizza Hut box.

At least the audio lives up to the highlighted sentence inside - "This 2011 version has been meticulously re-created using the finest modern analogue and digital technology from the original first-generation masters mixes" - because you can 'hear' this sucker the second you play that fairground opening to "Brighton Rock" - the manic Brian May guitars slowing creeping in as Mercury gives it some falsetto 'Jimmy went away' and 'Rock of Ages' lyrics. The team that did wonders with the 2005 versions of 1975's "A Night At The Opera" and 1976's "A Day At The Races" are back - KRIS FREDRIKSSON and JUSTIN SHIRLEY-SMITH with Audio maestro BOB LUDWIG doing the mastering. The Bonus EP has different sources  - all mastered by ADAM AYAN at Gateway Mastering. The results are amazing...

While the sheer sonic attack of the guitars in the brilliant and wild "Brighton Rock" is enough to impress (written by Brian May) - the impact of clarity on Freddie Mercury’s insanely catchy "Killer Queen" is another thing altogether. I've never heard May's layered guitars so clear - Mercury's lead vocal so in your face - the backing vocals and flanged effects – all of it is a wow. Brian Taylor's Rock 'n' Roll 45s has been enraging the stuffy neighbours on the lower floor in his "Tenement Funster". But what I hadn't bargained for is that piano-intro that segues into the sinister "Flick Of The Wrist" - it's so damn clean now - a long way from my battered UK EMI LP where the sleeve always seemed to split at the slightest pressure. The 'intoxicate your brain' vocals are full of power too. The short but pretty "Lily Of The Valley" is impressive - Mercury at the piano holding court as he continues the 'Seven Seas Of Rhye' story begun on "Queen II" in 1973. But my rave has always been the barnstorming single "Now I'm Here" - the opening vocals and drum whacks panning from speaker to speaker. When it kicks in with the 'I'm just a new man...' riff - you're won over - and you're down in the dungeon with peaches 'n' me.

Side 2's "In The Lap Of The Gods" has always been a Prog moment for me - oohs and aahs and crashing cymbals - wonderfully clear audio as parts of the song feel very similar in structure to 'that' single which would dominate Christmas 1975 (the last "Leave it in the Lap Of The Gods" chorus is so good). Back to mania with the huge "Stone Cold Crazy" and I'm thinking Heart was listening to this when they recorded "Barracuda". And again you marvel at the sheer virtuosity of May's playing - little flicks - huge riffs - memorable solos - he uses them all. Although it sounds like a Freddie tune - the short but sweet "Dear Friends" is actually a Brian May composition and feels like a hymn sung to a child. John Deacon puts up the acoustic bop of "Misfire" where love's a game and don't misfire your loaded gun (ok boys). I've always disliked the cod seaside banjo of "Bring Back That Leroy Brown" - better is May's "She Makes Me" where Queen feel melodious and huge at one and the same time. It ends on another vocal tour-de-force - the revisited "In The Lap Of The Gods" - the manic stripped away - Queen wallowing in their own sound...

"Now I'm Here" on the Bonus EP actually dates from the British November/December 1975 tour for "A Night At The Opera" where both the album and the single "Bohemian Rhapsody" nestled at No. 1 in the charts. It was recorded at The Hammersmith Odeon in London and apparently this kick-ass version opened the show. Hero of the hour for the two BBC Sessions turns out to be a man I bought records off while I worked at Reckless - BBC Sound Recording man Jeff Griffin (engineered by Chris Lycett). Apparently it was practice for the Beeb to wipe tapes back in those less-enlightened days - but Jeff held onto to them for 40 years – hence their new inclusion here. Both versions of "Flick Of The Wrist" and "Tenement Funster" are close to the finished articles - but it's fun to hear May letting rip on those guitar passages - cutting it live just as much as he did in the studio. The supposed 'A Cappella Mix' of "Bring Back That Leroy Brown" is best described as ‘fun’ - while the immersed rapture of the audience at Wembley Arena in July 1986 is genuinely audible on the finisher "In The Lap Of The Gods". From here the band would go on to do the Scaramouche and the Fandango with thunderbolts and lightning indeed when they owned the world in 1975...

In some ways I can't help thinking someone somewhere at Island Records could have come up with a tastier and more fan-pleasing presentation for "Sheer Heart Attack" after all these decades. And that money-gremlins over at Island know that serious fan-worship will drive Queen lovers into the arms of those Japanese SHM-CDs using the new remasters but with beautifully accurate Repro Mini LP Sleeves. Hell there’ll probably be yet another anniversary box set issue in the next few years with newly found/remixed tiny morsels to tempt us.

But in the meantime – this 2011 Digital Remaster does at least do the Stone Cold Crazy with Audio style. Suffice to say - for now you should park your Marie Antoinette's on this semi-naked Killer Queen...

Monday, 16 January 2017

"A Night At The Opera: 30th Anniversary Collectors Edition" by QUEEN - December 1975 UK LP on EMI Records (November 2005 EMI Records CD+DVD Remaster) - A Review by Mark Barry...






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"…You Make Me Live…" 

Too many anniversaries and way too many excuses to reissue a classic yet again - but which is the best version to buy of this iconic Seventies album? I'd argue the '30th Anniversary Collectors Edition' beats all the others on two fronts that should matter - an amazing CD remaster on Disc 1 - and a genuinely fan-pleasing Bonus DVD with heaps of quality extras. Here is the Scaramouche and do the Fandango...

Released November 2005 - "A Night At The Opera: 30th Anniversary Collectors Edition" by QUEEN on EMI 00946 3 38478 2 5 (Barcode 094633845725) is a CD and DVD Reissue/Remaster and breaks down as follows:

Disc 1 (43:08 minutes):
1. Death On Two Legs (Dedicated To...
2. Lazing On A Sunday Afternoon
3. I'm In Love With My Car
4. You're My Best Friend
5. '39
6. Sweet Lady
7. Seaside Rendezvous
8. The Prophet's Song [Side 2]
9. Love Of My Life
10. Good Company
11. Bohemian Rhapsody
12. God Save The Queen
Tracks 1 to 12 are their 4th album "A Night At The Opera" - released December 1975 in the UK on EMI Records EMTC 103 and in the USA on Elektra 7E-1053

DVD, PAL, 4:3 (No Region Coding):
The DVD had months of preparation where the original tapes were microscopically remastered into a 5.1 Surround Mix thereby genuinely giving the best possible remaster. It also features for the first time visuals for every track on the album (the original video for "Bohemian Rhapsody" has been digitally restored) with "Good Company" created especially for this release. The Main menu allows you to select the album in PCM 24-Bit STEREO or 5.1 SURROUND as well as allowing Song Selection. Off the Set Up tag - you also find the option to play each of the twelve tracks and their videos with an Audio Commentary (mostly Brian May). There are even lyrics and subtitles in English, Dutch, French, German, Italian, Portuguese and Spanish.

KRIS FREDRICKSSON and BOB LUDWIG are the team responsible for the Audio Restoration and Mastering (they also did "A Day The Races" - see separate review) and the Audio is stunning to say the least - probably (as Brian may thinks) - the best teh album will ever sound. 

While many of the original of-the-time videos looks decidedly blurry (despite cleaning it's the way they were lit and shot) - the new videos have allowed the band to put together hundreds of images and memorabilia shots for say "Lazing On A Sunday Afternoon" - it's properly amazing stuff and must have taken forever to do.

The outer 30th Anniversary Plastic Slip Case looks nice at first but is so prone to serious scuffing given any kind of use. The gatefold digipak has BRIAN MAY liner notes on the extensive work put into the reissue and an embossed front sleeve like the original vinyl album did. The beautifully laid-out 20-page booklet keeps it simple - just the lyrics with photos of the band and album artwork interspersed between the words. Both the CD and the DVD have the famous David Costa crest and logo.

Having had the 1994 CD for years - the upgrade in sound here is kind of shocking. The wild guitar and piano intro of "Death On Two Legs" now sounds properly mean - as do the Brian May screaming guitar parts on "I'm In Love With My Car". That keyboard opening on "You're My Best Friend" is punching with the menace of an irate kangaroo while the grungy guitars of "Sweet Lady" flit from speaker to speaker with a vengeance - coming at you in clever Roy Thomas Baker production ways.

But if there was one track on this album that would show sure-fire improvement over previous versions (apart from the obvious "Bohemian Rhapsody") - it was always going to be near nine-minute Side 2 monster "The Prophet's Song". Wow! The vocal gymnastics by Mercury and indeed the whole band now comes at you with astonishing clarity (this must surely have made its way into the grey matter of a young Kate Bush). And then there's 'that' song - "Bohemian Rhapsody". I'm of the age when I remember the video on Top Of The Pops astonishing audiences everywhere across the Christmas of 1975 and into the New Year. It sounds fantastic and I can't hear that amazing guitar break now without thinking about the 'dudes' giving it some head banging in the car.

2015 will see a 40th Anniversary and greed will no doubt dictate yet another uber deluxe reissue - but as Brian May says in this 2005 reissue "I doubt if it can ever be bettered!" He's been there and back on this one...and he would know...

"A Day At The Races" by QUEEN - December 1976 Fifth Studio Album on EMI Records (Island/Queen Productions UK '2011 Digital Remaster' CD + Bonus EP Edition Reissue and Remaster) - A Review by Mark Barry...





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1976

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"...You Take My Breath Away..."

In tiny print on Page 4 of this rather ordinary looking Island Records/Queen Productions '2011 Digital Remaster' Reissue are the unsung heroes of the hour - Audio Restoration by KRIS FREDRICKSSON and Mastering by BOB LUDWIG - meticulously re-created from the original analogue master tapes.

And having heard this densely overdubbed and overpopulated album before on a previous CD incarnation - these claims aren't some marketing ploy or Marx Brothers joke. Only a few moments into the layered-guitars fade-in pomp of "Tie Your Mother Down" and you're in no doubt that its time to 'party down'. The clarity of the piano and vocal in the quieter passages of "The Millionaire Waltz" – that huge guitar solo on "You And I" - the wall of voices on "Somebody To Love" – it’s all magnificent and a world away from our humble Christmas LPs from 1976. Take My Breath Away indeed. Let's get to the Royal silverware right away...

UK released 14 March 2011 (17 May 2011 in the USA) - "A Day At The Races" by QUEEN on Island Records/Queen Productions 276 441 6 (Barcode 602527644165) is a '2011 Digital Remaster' Edition with a Bonus EP. There is also a single-disc version of "A Day In The Races" (minus the EP CD) that comes in a 'Super-Disc' rounded-corner jewel case and is on Island Records/Queen Productions 276 441 7 (Barcode 602527644172).

Disc 1 "A Day The Races" album - 44:29 minutes:
1. Tie Your Mother Down
2. You Take My Breath Away
3. Long Away
4. The Millionaire Waltz
5. You And I
6. Somebody To Love [Side 2]
7. White Man
8. Gold Old-Fashioned Lover Boy
9. Drowse
10. Teo Torriatte (Let Us Cling Together)
Tracks 1 to 10 are their 5th studio album "A Day At The Races" - released December 1976 in the UK on EMI Records EMTC 104 and January 1977 in the USA on Elektra 6E-101. Played, Arranged and Produced by QUEEN (Engineered by MIKE STONE) - it peaked at No. 1 in the UK and No. 5 in the USA on the album charts.

Disc 2 "Bonus EP" - 22:33 minutes:
1. Tie Your Mother Down (Backing Track Mix 2011)
2. Somebody To Love (Live At Milton Keynes Bowl, June 1982)
3. You Take My Breath Away (Live In Hyde Park, September 1976)
4. Good Old-Fashioned Lover Boy (Top Of The Pops, July 1977) (Mono)
5. Teo Torriatte (Let Us Cling Together) (HD Mix)

It seems odd to me after all the obvious aural diligence spent on this reissue that someone at Island couldn't have come up with packaging that reflected the beauty of the original gatefold LP. Both "A Night At The Opera" and "A Day At The Races" famously reeked of visual opulence - embossed Queen Logo artwork – a lavish gatefold sleeve and inner - they 'felt' like an event as well as sounded like one. The square double jewel case and the 12-page booklet do the job for sure - but even though the lyrics are there - the four band member photos, some extra live shots and new liner notes on the Bonus EP (but not the album?) - it all feels dreadfully ordinary for a No. 1 record ("A Night At The Opera" had achieved the same rare chart status in December 1975). And frankly why have two editions when you could have had one with the EP added onto CD1 as extras tracks (there’s room)?

Recorded between July and November 1976 – the layering and scope of these songs is (even now) huge and yet still uniquely 'Queen'. You have to marvel at Brian May's distinctive guitar sound and his sixpence plectrums – those flourishes on the decidedly strange "White Man" – and then leaping from that to the acoustic simplicity of "Long Away" – a song I return to much more than all the others. Those swirling guitars that open Roger Taylor's "Drowse" sound just like its title - and again brilliant clarity as May's slide-guitar flourishes give a nod to Pink Floyd’s Dave Gilmour on "Wish You Were Here" from the year prior. The near six-minutes of the finale song "Teo Torriatte (Let Us Cling Together)" allow Freddie Mercury space to show off his extraordinary vocal range as Brian plays Harmonium Piano. I’d forgotten how pretty the melody is – and that anthemic vocal passage before the Quadrophenia musical ending is pure Queen.

Bonus Tracks are often crap that should have stayed in the can – but the Bonus EP turns out to be actually worth of the moniker Bonus. It is truly bizarre to hear "Tie Your Mother Down" as an instrumental with partial vocals (Freddie’s lead is removed) – but it actually works and comes as a genuinely clever addition to the album’s canon. Widely regarded as their best performance of the vocal marathon that is "Somebody To Love" – the Milton Keynes performance makes up in sheer passion for what it lacks in fidelity (are you ready). Freddie previews the gorgeous “You Take My Breath Away” a full two months before the album’s release somehow getting the exited audience to ‘listen to this one’ – his vocal and piano mesmerizing – reminding you of his power as a live performer. It’s special stuff. The Mono Top Of The Pops cut of "Good old Fashioned Lover Boy" is the worst sounding track on here – but with different May guitar work – extra vocals from Roger and Freddie – it’s a collector’s nugget. First included on the Japan-Only "Jewels II" Box Set in 2005 – the High Definition Digital Mix of "Teo Torriatte (Let Us Cling Together)" sounds spectacular for sure – but then so does the 2011 – both feeling like veils lifted in terms of audio.

Aside from my reservations about the presentation – this is a balls-to-the-wall triumph in the area that matters most – the sound. And thankfully that Bonus EP actually lives up to its name. Find a version to love – this is the one...

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