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January 1, 2006 Where Does High-Resolution Audio Stand?
There is nothing wrong with either the SACD or the DVD-A format. I would not be writing exclusively about them if there were. Their lack of popularity is due to bad marketing and promotion, poor distribution, and greed. Remember the early days of stereo, when there was double inventory for a year or so? There is still double inventory with SACD, for no reason other than bottom-line profit. The DualDisc camp has learned from this, putting out DualDisc releases in stores right beside regular CDs. You want the new Bruce Springsteen? Its a DualDisc; you can play one side of the disc in your CD player, then the other side in your DVD player to access new and exciting features. If those who produce high-resolution recordings dont believe in them enough to release them on a single format, why should the public accept the whole idea? Universal players that can play any disc format were a little late in arriving, but theyre now here in force. Whats the point in continuing to release two versions of the same recording? Sony started the whole thing off on the wrong foot by making almost all of its SACDs incompatible with all other formats. They could be played only on SACD players. The company finally starting making hybrid SACD/CDs, but a little too late. Well, no, it isnt too late -- if every record label suddenly put out all of their releases in a single format -- hybrid SACD/CD -- everyone would win. People who play only CDs could play them, and those of us interested in climbing audios rung could have more titles to choose from. Thats not the way it is. Only three record labels seem totally committed to hybrid SACD: Channel Classics, Pentatone, and Praga. Almost all new releases from these labels are on hybrid multichannel SACDs that can be played on CD, SACD, and universal players. Moreover, Channel and Pentatone seem very proud of the fact. Other companies have committed in different ways. Telarc releases almost everything on SACD and CD, but some titles are still released only on CD. BMG has the wonderful RCA Living Stereo series -- three releases of ten titles each so far, and more no doubt coming -- but its regular releases are strictly hit or miss. The same goes for Universal, which puts out the Mercury Living Presence recordings as SACDs, and for BIS and ARTS. Many smaller labels produce outstanding SACDs from time to time as well. Sony, which started the whole thing, has released precious few SACDs since launching the DualDisc. Then theres DVD-Audio. The Time Warner labels, including Warner-Elektra-Asylum, Nonesuch, and Teldec, are still into the format but release precious few titles, those usually as two-disc sets that include a DVD-A and a CD. AIX has gone the DualDisc route, with DVD-A and CD sides. Naxos, once fully committed to DVD-A, has moved more and more toward SACD, as has ARTS. My conclusion: DVD-A is almost dead but still kicking, however feebly. SACD is not dead at all, as more and more releases are added to the catalog. If Pentatones and Channel Classics promotion can make a dent in the market, other companies will follow and make SACD more of a household word by releasing entire catalogs on hybrid SACDs. In the meantime, the SACD/CD remains a healthy niche format thats far from "dead." The promised blue-laser formats, Blu-ray and HD-DVD, are still in the works and unlikely to take over anytime soon. And although everyone is excited about these formats possibilities for high-definition video, few have said anything about the audio possibilities. Stay tuned -- and record producers, if you have opinions, write. Well print your letters. Meanwhile, this is the season when everyone lists the best recordings of the year. For this column, I say the same thing I did last year: Check the column archives and youll have your list. And here are three great-sounding recordings to start our 2006 list. Leopold Stokowski: Symphonic Transcriptions
Serebriers readings are dramatic, incisive, and colorful -- so much so that I think they outdo Stokowskis own recordings. The orchestral sound has weight and presence, and conjures up that overused word, awesome. The frequency range is enormous. There is a lot of percussion here, and all of it, from the tiniest bell down to the weighty gong, can be heard with equal clarity. If youre looking for a recording of a full orchestra to show off your new high-resolution surround-sound system, you couldnt do better than Symphonic Transcriptions. This magnificent recording is also available in a dazzling hybrid multichannel SACD version. Hanson: Symphony No.2, "Romantic"; Fanfare
for the Signal Corps; Suite from Merry Mount; Bold Island Suite
Jackson Browne: Running On Empty
The new DVD-Audio multichannel mix seems to consider that, shifting the acoustic perspective from song to song. The opening and closing tracks, "Running On Empty" and "Stay," were recorded live, the instruments up front and the crowd all around the listener, who is clearly cast in the role of concertgoer. Other songs, such as "Rosie," seem to have been caught in more intimate circumstances, with Browne up front and the backup singers in the rear, much as in an intimate rehearsal. There is no live-action video, but two montages feature intimate photographs by Joel Bernstein. Overall, it is the high-resolution sound that most impresses me. Especially on the DVD, but on the newly mastered CD as well, are nuances and small touches I swear I never heard on the original CD mix. Overall, theres a sense of liveness and presence that graces no other Jackson Browne disc. The singer-songwriters voice is revealed as flawed, and sounds much more successful for that human trait. Warner and Rhino seem to be shying away from the DualDisc in favor of packages that include a separate CD and DVD-A. Fine by me. If your CD is stolen from your vehicle, the DVD will no doubt be safe at home. One request: If Rhino and Warner are so intent on releasing certain artists complete works on DVD-A (e.g., Talking Heads, R.E.M.), why not give Jackson Browne that treatment? His isnt that big an oeuvre, and would surely find a lot of customers. ...Rad Bennett
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