what are you listening to?

orange

Veteran and General Yakker
Joined
Jul 6, 2010
Messages
17,704
Tagline
Broken beyond repair but highly affable
Before the Monkees??
AFTER the Monkees. That RCA logo didn't exist before 1968, when Radio Corporation of America (RCA) became RCA Corporation, or around the time of the second Jefferson Airplane release. Nipper disappeared for a while and the Orange RCA label came about, the symphonic and other special stuff still came out on the Red Seal label. Eventually the regular label went back to black with the new logo and Nipper. When the RCA Records Label was sold to BMG and later Sony bought BMG the old round RCA logo with the lightning tails on the letters came back.

The Monkees were on Colgems, an imprint label of Columbia-Screen Gems (the TV series producer) and that went to Arista later, the successor run by a former Columbia Records (Not Pictures) executive.

Arista became part of pre-BMG RCA, which made it part of Sony eventually and Arista artists ended up on the RCA Records Label or another Sony label.

So it all ended up in the same place, more or less. SONY.
 
Last edited:

speakerlabfan

Veteran and General Yakker
Joined
Nov 4, 2012
Messages
3,168
Location
Seattle area
Tagline
---
It's A Beautiful Day - self titled
(1969, Columbia) 1985 issue on the San Francisco Sound label




gatefold cover. great sound quality. Hot Summer Day is a good song for this time of year!
 

speakerlabfan

Veteran and General Yakker
Joined
Nov 4, 2012
Messages
3,168
Location
Seattle area
Tagline
---
Various Artists - Sometimes A Great Notion original soundtrack
(1971, Decca)




No novel may have a more interesting opening passage than "Sometimes a Great Notion," which begins as Kesey tracks the birth of a river:


"Along the western slopes of the Oregon Coastal Range ... come look: the hysterical crashing of tributaries as they merge into the Wakonda Auga River. ... The first little washes flashing like thick rushing winds through sheep sorrel and clover, ghost fern and nettle, sheering, cutting ... forming branches. Then, through bearberry and salmonberry, blueberry and blackberry, the branches crashing into creek, into streams. Finally, in the foothills, through tamarack and sugar pine, sh+ttim bark and silver spruce -- and the green and blue mosaic of Douglas fir -- the actual river falls 500 feet ... and look: opens out upon the fields."
 

stuwee

Flying the Vista Cruiser up there... RIP
Joined
Jun 12, 2010
Messages
8,382
Location
Deep in the Sonoran Desert SW
Well, I'm not playing it, in fact, I'm not going to even open it until Lee and Jani get here. It's a classic remastered on 180grm, we can do what we did in the old daze, party like when the parents went out of town :hippy2::occasion5:, slap that puppy on the Thorens, look at the artwork and liner notes...:iconbiggrin:
 

62vauxhall

Veteran and General Yakker
Joined
May 14, 2014
Messages
2,321
Location
Southwest Kootenays BC
Tagline
No such things as bad days, just bad moments
Uriah Heep

Live
January 1973
Choice! You got the photo booklet / "additional albums by" insert?

They played here just around the time that album came out. Loud....and what a performance - it was stunning! Bought that album as soon as I saw it and I'm not big on live recordings.
 

speakerlabfan

Veteran and General Yakker
Joined
Nov 4, 2012
Messages
3,168
Location
Seattle area
Tagline
---
Emerson, Lake & Palmer - Tarkus
(1971, Cotillion) Monarch symbol, AT/GP in the deadwax, mastered by George Piros




RIP Keith Emerson, Greg Lake. My favorite ELP title. Crushing sound quality on this pressing.
 

Lazarus Short

Veteran and General Yakker
Joined
Mar 10, 2012
Messages
14,293
Location
Independence, MO
Tagline
I'm the Red Knight, by grant of the Black
I don't often post on this thread, but I recently went back to the phono cartridge which came with the Sony linear-tracker, a Shure M110HE with a JICO stylus. Vinyl now sounds like it should. Last night, I came across the four big AQ sorbothane pucks/biscuits, and slipped them under the feet of the Sony. Listening this morning, it didn't sound right, so I slipped them back off, letting the TT back onto the MDF/plexiglass stack. The solid weight did better, and vinyl sounded better.

Anyway, I listened to Joni Mitchell's Hejira, a promo copy I bought from Love Records (a local, and legendary, LP shop) back in 1977. At least "Love Records" and the date are stamped inside the jacket. My careful buying practices paid off here, as the fidelity and sound are quite nice, and groove condition is near noise-free. I rarely listen to this LP except on snowy winter evenings...
 

Attachments

Top