PET SOUNDS: Analogue Productions Takes on the Hot Stamper

On this website you’ll find quite a few articles that discuss the relative virtues of various titles when comparing vintage copies of those titles to their modern reissued counterparts. I started writing these articles because I was interested in learning how well a typical 180g modern vinyl reissue stacks up against the average vintage copy of the same title. You can find these articles here.

I can just give you a synopsis for just about every one of these articles right here – your average modern reissue, when compared to even your run of the mill vintage pressing, doesn’t stack up well at all.

In fairness, modern records are typically not mastered to sound great on a high quality playback system. These records are made to sound good on decent systems that are built to highlight the strengths of such records and downplay their flaws. This fact has become even more clear to me as my own system has improved and as a fair number records that used to sound good to me no longer do.

But until recently I had never heard a copy of The Beach Boys’ Pet Sounds that sounded better to me than the stereo reissue from Analogue Productions. Analogue Productions, at least from a marketing standpoint, is not producing your “average” modern records. AP is clearly marketing to and presumably mastering and cutting records for the audiophile market. My copy easily bested another recent reissue I owned as well as a mono original I had for a while, and I’ve been pretty content with it for the years I’ve owned it.

So when the price of a Hot Stamper of Pet Sounds dropped into a range that I could justify (yes! their prices do sometimes come down!), I went for it. I wanted to hear for myself if and how a Hot Stamper might improve on the Analogue Productions version I’d been enjoying.

Before I get into that, I’d like to say something about this audiophile hobby that I hope will keep what I’ll say going forward here in perspective.

I’m a somewhat obsessive audiophile who is not wealthy, and while I’m not as obsessive as many other audiophiles out there, I’m way more obsessive about sound than your average record collector with a decent stereo.

I realize that not everyone who lands on this site has the money, time and / or level of obsessiveness required to appreciate everything I’m writing about here. To other collectors and audiophiles who have stumbled on this site, I would say this – buy and play the records you like and that you enjoy listening to. By all means!

But leave the door open to the possibility that your system and your ear will improve over time, and that your opinion about what sounds good to you now may very well change down the road. Mine certainly has.

I would also say this about Pet Sounds – you may very well like the Analogue Productions version. It does have its strengths. It’s more transparent than your average vintage copy, and for less than 1/3 the price of a Hot Stamper it might be the best choice for you.

But if you remain curious, here’s what I found comparing my Hot Stamper copy to the Analogue Productions Stereo reissue.

The Hot Stamper has great depth to the soundstage, and the instruments in every part of it sound clear and true with lots of room to breathe. This alone is reason enough to recommend itIt has “master tape sound” all over it.

The instruments in general, and the drums especially, have good weight on this Hot Stamper. The various percussion instruments have a very “live in the studio” sound, whereas on the AP version the bells and tambourines sound “twinkly” and lack realness and presence.

The AP does capture a sense of the studio space as well, but perhaps because of the stereo mix, the musical elements sound dispersed. There’s a lack of cohesiveness to the sound of AP’s version. The instruments present as a collection of individual parts that don’t quite seem to be playing together in the same space. I have not heard AP’s mono vision of Pet Sounds, but it’s possible that version sounds more cohesive than this stereo version.

The bass on the Hot Stamper, while very good, is not always as tight and solid as I’d like it to be (no longer an issue since writing this). But on the AP version the bass is bloated, one of the more common problems I’ve found with modern records in general and a quality I find totally unacceptable.

Of course what really matters most on Pet Sounds, and for that matter any Beach Boys album, are the vocals and how well they’re reproduced. Sometimes Brian Wilson’s vocals threaten to overwhelm the other elements of the mix on this album.

I strongly suspect that this is what’s on the master tape. Therefore to the extent that it would be considered a flaw, it is a flaw in the recording and/or the mix and thus will likely be a flaw on every copy of the record. So if the vocals do not resolve well on this record, they will sound “groany” and “whiny”.

AP seems to have tried to fix this “problem” by smoothing out the vocals in the mix. If this is in fact what they set out to do, they achieved it. If on your copy of this record the vocals sound too loud and whiny, which I suspect is the case on the majority of copies, then you will likely find the AP version of this record a welcome relief. The vocals on the AP never sound harsh or overbearing.

But the vocals on the AP version also lack a certain assertiveness, and they fail to convey the passion and angst in Wilson’s songs. The smoothing out of the vocals on the AP comes at the expense of a realness and palpability that I feel serves this music better. I will admit that, on occasion, I find Wilson’s vocals a bit loud and harsh on the Hot Stamper, but overall they have a power and forcefulness that I’m more drawn to.

On “Caroline No”, for instance, Wilson’s passion really comes through on the Hot Stamper. I found this song in particular to have a “high rez” sound that really highlighted Wilson’s vocals and an overall “tubey” warmth that the AP version couldn’t match.

This smoothing out of the vocals on the AP version is also sometimes at the expense of the vocal harmonies, which can sound distant on this version. On “Here Today” for instance, the backing vocals almost disappear on the AP version. On the Hot Stamper the vocal harmonies are invariably sweet, full and present.

Pet Sounds shares a kinship with The Beatles’ Sgt. Peppers in that it came out not long before it and was apparently part of the inspiration for the fab five in making that album. I love both albums and artistically, each album certainly more than holds its own with the other. But Sgt. Peppers is by far the better recorded album. It can sound AMAZING, while Pet Sounds can sound, well…,  very good as it does on this Hot Stamper copy, or just good as it does on the Analogue Productions version. Unfortunately I don’t think Pet Sounds will ever sound AMAZING.

Still, if you love this album as I do then I would say it’s worth springing for a Hot Stamper. I seriously doubt you’ll find another copy of this album with the “master tape” sound you’ll get with a copy from Better Records. But if your record budget is limited, or you just can’t see your way clear to spending on a Hot Stamper, then you might be perfectly happy with a copy from Analogue Productions.

 

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