January 6th, 2023
Technics SL-100C Is a Grand Bargain a "Premium Class" 1200 variant for $1000 By: Michael FremerTechnics couldn’t have better timed its 2015 re-entry into the audio enthusiast turntable market. Interest in vinyl took off that year, growing 30% from around 9 million sold in 2014 to 12 million in 2015. Skeptics and naysayers credited Adele and Taylor Swift for that year’s boost but each year since, and without a “big” record, sales continued growing until in 2021, unit sales, not just dollar sales surpassed those of CDs. Vinyl was victorious. Sales grew 22% in the... Read More
Comments: 12January 5th, 2023
SME Updates Turntable Lineup to MK2 Editions new generation A.C. synchronous motor drive system By: Tracking AngleBuffalo, NY, January 5, 2023—Bluebird Music, SME's North American distributor announced today the immediate availability of the all-new SME MK2 series turntables. The SME product range now includes: Model 12 MK2, Model 15 MK2, Model 20 MK2, Model 30 MK2 and Synergy MK2. The main photo is of the Model 15 MK2.According to Bluebird, the primary feature of the MK2 editions is a "highly sophisticated new generation drive system consisting of an A.C. synchronous... Read More
Comments: 0January 5th, 2023
Karen Dalton's Time May Be Now Light in the Attic reissues deluxe double 45rpm edition of cult fave By: JoE SilvaIf you didn’t know anything about Karen Dalton when you dropped the stylus on one of her records, you’d quickly get the sense that her life probably hadn’t been an easy one. Mournful, and sung in a voice that parsed the terrain between Billie Holiday and Janis Joplin, the songs on the 50th Anniversary Edition of the singer’s second and final long player can be a tough listen. But thanks to multiple reissue campaigns, her work has filtered on down through five plus... Read More
Comments: 0January 4th, 2023
Tracking Angle Interviews World Famous Record Holderupper Dizzy! Dizzy came to Tracking Angle studios for this rare interview By: Michael FremerDizzy, the Internet's most prolific and self-important record holderupper paid a visit to the Tracking Angle studios and I interviewed him! Nothing more needs to be written. Dizzy speaks for himself, or doesn't. Read More
Comments: 4January 3rd, 2023
PS Audio Sprout 100 Does Everything But Take Up Space updated from original Sprout, the 100 is likely getting another upgrade next year By: Michael FremerThis review is late, a victim of job change-related delays (among other things) but better late than never, even if PS Audio's updating history indicates a newer edition might be on the way—the Sprout100 replaced the original Sprout, which began life as a Kickstarter funded project back in 2014. The Sprout100 came about five years later so the "next gen" Sprout if there is to be one, might come next year.For now though, there's the Sprout100, which... Read More
Comments: 3January 3rd, 2023
Le Dernier Message De Lester Young (The Last Message Of Lester Young) Sam Records reissues the last Lester Young album with bonus 10 inch LP By: Joseph W. WashekIn April 1958, Lester Young moved into the Hotel Alvin, a seedy hotel at the corner of Broadway and Fifty-Second street in New York City, which, because it was cheap, was home to many musicians. Lester owned a house on Long Island in which his wife and two children lived but the Alvin was directly across the street from Birdland, and that was where Lester wanted to be.Lester wasn’t playing at Birdland or any of the other major clubs in Manhattan. His chronic... Read More
Comments: 6January 2nd, 2023
A Musically Satisfying Mendelssohn Octet in E Flat Major Demo Disc From Chasing the Dragon lets you compare analog vs. digital, 33 1/3 vs, 45, 1/2 speed to normal, tube vs. transistor mics By: Michael FremerMendelssohn completed his Octet in E Flat Major when he was 16 years old. Good thing he started composing brilliant pieces while young because he was dead at 38. After completing the piece, dedicated to his violin teacher Eduard Rietz, Mendelssohn gave him the score as a birthday present on October 17, 1825. Rietz copied out all of the parts and it was quickly performed in an informal family gathering. Rietz lived an even shorter life. Tuberculosis got him at age 30.... Read More
Comments: 3January 1st, 2023
TrackingAngle Visits darTZeel Audio, Geneva Switzerland a move into a much larger manufacturing facility in the heart of watchmaking heaven By: Michael FremerLast summer, while visiting Geneva to attend the Montreux Jazz Festival and produce a Nagra factory tour I also visited darTZeel Audio's brand new manufacturing facility. The company had just moved from its old funky loft location into this brand new, modern cooperative facility and CEO Hervé Delétraz was anxious to show it to me. The Lake Geneva photo was taken from the air as my plane approached the airport.Delétraz had arranged with his friends at Nagra to... Read More
Comments: 0December 29th, 2022
Do These Guys Look like They're Counting Down to Ecstasy? the Dan's second album was recorded "...in a desultory, haphazard fashion." By: Michael FremerOther than Donald Fagen, the boys hanging in the studio control room in the back jacket photo look either pissed (Denny Dias), mildly bemused and/or disgusted (Walter Becker), or completely stoned and/or exhausted (Jeff "Skunk" Baxter). Drummer Jim Hodder, too far from the camera to read and noticeably isolated physically from the others, would soon exit the band after being pushed out of the drummer seat by Jim Gordon and Jeff Porcaro on the third album... Read More
Comments: 12December 28th, 2022
Hagerman Audio Labs "Archiver" Spins 78s Correctly EQ'd, But That's Just For Starters Does it All—MM, MC, single-ended, balanced, + By: Michael FremerEven if you don't collect 78rpm records and can't understand why anyone would want to listen to crackling, breakable 3 minute obsolete antiques, consider that streamers and CD fans think the same of people who collect vinyl records. Of course, we know better, and you can believe so do 78rpm collectors.Regardless of your enthusiasm or not for 78s you are sure to enjoy Amanda Petrusich's book "Do Not Sell At Any Price" subtitled "The Wild,... Read More
Comments: 2December 26th, 2022
The Aural Equivalent of Watching The Blue Angels Air Show Uptempo Pepper and Baker in their prime leave a vapor trail By: Michael FremerDespite the inherent lightness and breeze of "West Coast" jazz, this set recorded Halloween day 1956 is simultaneously cool and blazing hot, with Art Pepper and Chet Baker at their youthful peak navigating a set of intricately written and charted tunes, five of the seven by Jimmy Heath, hence the album's title, plus two by Pepper.If you're of a certain age, some of the uptempo vibe here will remind you of 50s and 60s era television show theme songs... Read More
Comments: 6December 26th, 2022
Is That Jazz? Lil B’s ‘Afrikantis’ The most fascinating avant-garde jazz album in recent times By: Malachi LuiAnyone who predicted this is either a time traveler or is clinically insane (probably both). It’s December 2022, everyone’s “best albums of 2022” lists are out, and Lil B has dropped a jazz album.That’s right: Lil B The Based God, the rapper and motivational speaker who’s perhaps the most detrimentally prolific artist of our time (did anyone actually listen to all eight volumes of his 855 Song Based Freestyle Mixtape?), has made what can loosely be considered a jazz... Read More
Comments: 7December 24th, 2022
John Zorn Keeps Evolving The impresario of New York new music's new piano quartet By: Fred KaplanYears (it feels like eons) have passed since John Zorn filled his bill as the Angry Young Man of New York’s Downtown jazz scene. (In a bit of etymology right out of a Terry Southern novel, "Zorn" in German means “anger.”) Nearly a decade ago, on the occasion of his 60th birthday, he was touted in tributes and concerts by such exemplars of Uptown culture as the Lincoln Center, the Metropolitan Museum, the Guggenheim, and Columbia University. Now recognized as... Read More
Comments: 0December 21st, 2022
Handel's "Messiah"—And The Recording That Changed The Classical Record Industry ’Tis the season, and in the classical music world that means Christmas carols, Nutcrackers, more carols—and Handel’s “Messiah”. By: Mark WardWhich is actually quite odd, because Messiah was never intended by its composer as a Christmas piece - quite the opposite in fact. It was originally composed, in 1741, for performance at the most solemn time in the ecclesiastical calendar - Easter. The work tells the entirety of Christ’s story, culminating in His Crucifixion and Resurrection, with a meditation on the meaning of His life and death to Christians. So, this is hardly the stuff of Christmas levity.However,... Read More
Comments: 10December 20th, 2022
TrackingAngle.com's Christmas Radio Show From 2016 is Here! Same show, changed "previous endeavor"'s name By: Michael FremerIn the mid 2010s I had a two hour radio show on the Fairleigh Dickinson college radio station WFDU. It was fun, it was popular and everything played on it was transferred at 96/24 from vinyl so it sounded really good. The weekly show was done under the name of my previous endeavor. I wasn't paid for it so I've gone in and changed the name to "TrackingAngle.com radio". I think you'll really enjoy the eclectic Christmas music and banter from the... Read More
Comments: 1