Category Archives: Music, Video & Print

Master category for all “media” posts.

Pandora Tops Terrestrial Radio

I had no idea Pandora was this popular…

RAIN 7/28: Pandora beats all terrestrial stations among A18-34 in top five markets

A lot of it is radio-ratings-speak, but it is interesting that in NYC, Chicago and L.A., Pandora beat all of the top terrestrial stations in those markets.  I believe that the proliferation of smartphones and home streaming devices (such as the Squeezebox) helped make it more popular as well, as you need an internet connection to use Pandora.

The Infinite Dial also mentions their Tuesday report from Edison Research and Arbitron showing that 10% of respondents nationally had listened to Pandora in the previous week.  They make a good point here:

While Pandora’s personalization and the ability to skip songs leads some people to think of it as “the other,” it’s actually the culmination of what many radio programmers have been trying to do for the last 35 years, since listener music research took hold on a large scale: progressively eliminate more and more of the “bad songs.” It’s just that Pandora users have the advantage of deciding for themselves what the “bad songs” are, even if their own tastes aren’t all that different from what 100 respondents typically decide.

Putting programming control into the hands of listeners seems to be the key to their success.

How HAECO-CSG Kills The Music

“Wrecked,” as one audio engineer calls it.  That is what HAECO-CSG does to music.  What is it, and why was it so bad for recorded music? To understand the process, you have to turn the clock back to the late 60s, when both monaural and sterophonic playback equipment were commonplace in many homes back in the late 1960s.  In some ways, the two were compatible, but in others, they weren’t.  HAECO-CSG attempted to cure that problem.  Little did anyone realize what a sonic mess it made out of recordings.  How could something with good intentions lead to such bad sound?

You have to consider what happens when you play a stereo recording, summed to mono.  The left and right signals stay the same volume, but since music more in the center of the soundstage were present in both channels, they could be as much as three decibels higher than the far left/right signals, which would throw off the balance (the “mix”) of the recording.

Rather than issue two separate versions of a recording as had been done in the past, Howard Holzer, A&M Records’ chief engineer in Los Angeles, created a system that would electrically alter the recording so that when the stereo recording was “folded down” to mono, the balance would be mostly preserved.   HAECO was the Holzer Audio Engineering Company, and CSG was the Compatible Stereo Generator. Mission accomplished?

Not quite.  While a casual and non-critical listener may never hear a difference, the end result is an effect where the stereo soundstage is smeared.  To give an example, let’s use an example of a human, male voice.  Say, Sergio Mendes, on the track “When Summer Turns To Snow” from the Fool On The Hill album, one on which CSG was used to master the album.  A human voice consists of the fundamental frequency (the pitch of the voice…Sergio sings in a baritone), and sibilants (or “formants”), which are like the rasp of the vocal cords, the whistle of air between the teeth, or other high frequency components that are not the main pitch.

Normally in a stereo recording, you can pinpoint the voice by both the formants and the fundamental frequency coming from the exact same spot in the soundstage.  Not so with CSG.  What happens is that the image is smeared.  The formants can be pinpointed, but the fundamental frequency is smeared across the soundstage in a “phasey” sort of way.  The sound also has more of an overly-full presentation to it.  The net effect of CSG with a voice like Sergio’s, and the rest of the music, is almost the same kind of phasey effect you get with the “fake” stereo that was also popular at the time.

The real problem, today, is that many recordings were mixed to two-channel stereo with the CSG processor in the chain, so no two-channel tape exists without the CSG processing.  The only way to properly undo the CSG effect is to remix from the original multitrack master tapes…if they even still existed.  Many CDs have been reissued over the years that contain the CSG processing.  They sound about as good as

There is another fix, and I will outline this in my next installment.  Stay tuned.

Review: Prince’s Purple Rain on 180g Vinyl

Purple Rain [180 Gram Vinyl]It took me by surprise but then again, I never expected it:  Purple Rain was reissued on vinyl awhile ago, and I totally missed it!  OK, so I fell off the clue wagon on this one.  I had heard that Warner was reissuing Dirty Mind, Controversy and my personal favorite, 1999 on 180g vinyl this coming May, and managed to pick up Purple Rain to give it a spin.  Seeing that Prince has never had his early catalog remastered, all we have had are lackluster early-release CDs and our aging vinyl.  Is the new 180 gram version any improvement?

The reissue of Purple Rain, cut by Bernie Grundman Mastering, is very good indeed!  Anything is better than the CD currently out there, and one thing I noticed about this 180g version is that there is more clarity to the music.  I’ve discovered in these later years that one of my favorite tracks is “Take Me With U” which has a killer production to it; you can really hear the acoustic guitar through the mix on the vinyl.  The distortion at the end of “Let’s Go Crazy” (on the original vinyl cut) is also removed, so it plays back much cleaner.  (It is comparable to the 12″ single version, in fact.)

The vinyl itself is fairly quiet, but not as quiet as the Van Morrison Moondance I reviewed a short while ago.  Some minor ticks are about the extent of it.  The only other flaw is that mine has some minor dish warp to it, but that is nothing a good record clamp can’t fix. A nice touch is having a reprint of the original inner sleeve, plus reproductions of the original LP labels on both sides.  Definitely recommended for fans of Prince, and I am anxiously awaiting the reissue of the three earlier albums.

2011 Grammys: New Year, Same Trainwreck

This will probably be the last Grammy rant I ever post.  Usually I complain about the horrible music, the pathetic entertainers, the irrelevance of the awards in general, or anything else that comes to mind.  But this year, I think I’ve finally figured it out: I have The Answer, which will save me having to write my yearly rant from here on out.  The Answer?

Continue reading 2011 Grammys: New Year, Same Trainwreck

Van Morrison’s Moondance on 180g LP

Moondance [Vinyl]Stunning!  In a word, that describes the sound of this meticulously produced 180 gram LP reissue of Van Morrison’s Moondance from the folks at Rhino (Warner Brothers).  I need not go into the album itself, which is already a popular music classic.  But to hear this release is proof positive that analog LPs can sound every bit as good as digital, and even surpass it.  I played this for a friend who was not in tune with the differences between digital and analog–even she was impressed!  When I tried to pin down her observations, it boiled down to this:  it sounds more “real” than digital.

A real treat, also, is how quiet the vinyl is.  My copy is just about perfect.  On the first play, I went through my usual ritual–put the LP on the turntable, queue up the lead-in groove, then kick up the volume to a predetermined level of background noise.  A few seconds later, you nearly had to peel me off of the back wall of the room–the vinyl is just about as quiet as a CD, and the beginning of “And It Stoned Me” really gave my ol’ ticker a jump start!  The best words I can use to describe the sound of this masterpiece:  warm, fluid and spacious.  The sound is so clean, yet very warm and lifelike.  Highly recommended:  5 stars +!  View the album on Amazon.