matthewpiano
Well-known member
I dug my Philips CD840 CD player out yesterday, out of interest, and compared it with the Rega. The Philips is an old Bitstream CD player and yet it sounds every bit as convincing as the same albums in good vinyl pressings. I'm of the opinion that both formats are there to be enjoyed, just as the best of music from all eras, including our own, is there for us to connect with as we wish.
There was some great creativity and some outstanding song writing going on back in the 60s and 70s. manicm mentions the Moody Blues - a great band who, certainly in those first few albums, produced some truly involving and unique music which I love listening to. There were so many others, from the folk-rock pioneers led by the mighty Ashley Hutchings (founder member of Fairport Convention, Steeleye Span and The Albion Band), to the canterbury groups (particularly Caravan, for me), through Pink Floyd and the other bands of the 60s underground scene. Albums like Love's 'Forever Changes', The Beatles' 'Abbey Road', Simon & Garfunkel's 'Bridge Over Tourbled Water' and many many more are incredible.
However, IMO the digital revolution and the wider availability of recording equipment and recording opportunities, has bought us music from both familiar and unfamiliar artists that we might never have heard. There are countless superb albums from recent years that have either pushed their associated genre further in new directions, or which sit as timeless statements of the artists' work. The first Imagined Village album, the brilliant and quirky Maestoso albums including 'Grim' and 'Caterwauling' (featuring the brilliant songwriting of Woolly Wolstenholme of BJH), Alice Gold's excellent album, and the opportunity for an artist like Steven Wilson to reach the position where he has been able to explore his myriad of musical interests through projects including Porcupine Tree, Blackfield, Bass Communion, no-man, solo material, and his new collaboration with one of the guys from Opeth (his name escapes me at the present moment). In Manchester there is a thriving scene based around various connotations on folk music with bands like Samson and Delilah, and The Woodbine and Ivy Band being able to record their innovative and interesting music - music which just would not have been recorded in the analogue era.
Rose tinted spectacles are all very well but, actually, the best music of the past is made all the richer by an appreciation of the best music of today, IMO.
There was some great creativity and some outstanding song writing going on back in the 60s and 70s. manicm mentions the Moody Blues - a great band who, certainly in those first few albums, produced some truly involving and unique music which I love listening to. There were so many others, from the folk-rock pioneers led by the mighty Ashley Hutchings (founder member of Fairport Convention, Steeleye Span and The Albion Band), to the canterbury groups (particularly Caravan, for me), through Pink Floyd and the other bands of the 60s underground scene. Albums like Love's 'Forever Changes', The Beatles' 'Abbey Road', Simon & Garfunkel's 'Bridge Over Tourbled Water' and many many more are incredible.
However, IMO the digital revolution and the wider availability of recording equipment and recording opportunities, has bought us music from both familiar and unfamiliar artists that we might never have heard. There are countless superb albums from recent years that have either pushed their associated genre further in new directions, or which sit as timeless statements of the artists' work. The first Imagined Village album, the brilliant and quirky Maestoso albums including 'Grim' and 'Caterwauling' (featuring the brilliant songwriting of Woolly Wolstenholme of BJH), Alice Gold's excellent album, and the opportunity for an artist like Steven Wilson to reach the position where he has been able to explore his myriad of musical interests through projects including Porcupine Tree, Blackfield, Bass Communion, no-man, solo material, and his new collaboration with one of the guys from Opeth (his name escapes me at the present moment). In Manchester there is a thriving scene based around various connotations on folk music with bands like Samson and Delilah, and The Woodbine and Ivy Band being able to record their innovative and interesting music - music which just would not have been recorded in the analogue era.
Rose tinted spectacles are all very well but, actually, the best music of the past is made all the richer by an appreciation of the best music of today, IMO.