Ultraanalogue Recordings new recordings from June 11 concert

hi Ed,

sounds like a great tape to buy.

any progress on doing a string quartet? or a string quartet series i can subscribe to? i just know your recording chain and the quality of your artists, would knock it out of the park! :)
Hi Mike,
I've had some talks with the New Orford String Quartet but no dates yet...(I wouldn't hold my breath, this pandemic's changed many things...)
However, on June 23, I have a concert with a new cellist Hayoung Choi who's playing both Haydn Cello Concertos with my Parisian pianist friend Yun Yang Lee. This will be a blast!
Thanks for your kind support!

Ed
 
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Hi Mike,
I've had some talks with the New Orford String Quartet but no dates yet...(I wouldn't hold my breath, this pandemic's changed many things...)
However, on June 23, I have a concert with a new cellist Hayoung Choi who's playing both Haydn Cello Concertos with my Parisian pianist friend Yun Yang Lee. This will be a blast!
Thanks for your kind support!

Ed
thanks Ed. that one sounds right up my alley. look forward to it.
 
One of the many things I appreciate about the tapes from UltraAnalogue is that Ed has done such a wonderful job of letting us see exactly what the recording venue looks like and how he has made these excellent sounding tapes. He has posted photos of the concert area, described what microphones are used and how they are placed for best results. We know the recording and tape duplication chain and how he has worked to make it better and better. This is important in creating a believable listening experience, having a reference in mind to hear how the performer sounded in that space. Most of the time we have only a few sparse details of what the recording venue was, maybe the name of the studio or concert hall. But Ed's generosity lets us know exactly where we are when the music begins.
This ability to create a believable music experience was certainly there when I began listening to Ed's wonderful recording of Vadym Kholodenko performing Beethoven's last three piano sonatas. There is so much clarity and lyricism in his playing that all of the sense of freedom mixed with structure is heard giving these pieces the feeling of being improvised rather than being played by rote. His sense of dynamics (coupled with Ed's unparalleled dynamic range capability!) gives us the flowing lyrical sometimes and at other times the dark and threatening.
This is exactly why we fuss with these antiquated, balky machines: to be able to sit down and appreciate one artist play and another artist record the sublime.
 
great writing, and i was told a lot of Ed and his recordings, i am still waiting for him to finish his upgrades to the 300B amp to get some copy and listen to his wander.
 
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One of the many things I appreciate about the tapes from UltraAnalogue is that Ed has done such a wonderful job of letting us see exactly what the recording venue looks like and how he has made these excellent sounding tapes. He has posted photos of the concert area, described what microphones are used and how they are placed for best results. We know the recording and tape duplication chain and how he has worked to make it better and better. This is important in creating a believable listening experience, having a reference in mind to hear how the performer sounded in that space. Most of the time we have only a few sparse details of what the recording venue was, maybe the name of the studio or concert hall. But Ed's generosity lets us know exactly where we are when the music begins.
This ability to create a believable music experience was certainly there when I began listening to Ed's wonderful recording of Vadym Kholodenko performing Beethoven's last three piano sonatas. There is so much clarity and lyricism in his playing that all of the sense of freedom mixed with structure is heard giving these pieces the feeling of being improvised rather than being played by rote. His sense of dynamics (coupled with Ed's unparalleled dynamic range capability!) gives us the flowing lyrical sometimes and at other times the dark and threatening.
This is exactly why we fuss with these antiquated, balky machines: to be able to sit down and appreciate one artist play and another artist record the sublime.
Many thanks for your kind words on Vadym's recording. I'm so happy you can hear the magic in his performance & the subtleties in the recorded sound! Every recording, even in the same space, has differences due to humidity, temperature and no instrument sounds the same everyday.
In my mind this recording, because of Beethoven's genius & Vadym's performance, is a pinnacle of solo piano recordings for me...

Thank you for listening!

Ed
 
I recently had to do a slight modification to my Studer A80 RC deck, since I use the NextGen playback amplifiers the front chassis panel is left hanging down. With the NextGen boards the audio outputs are taken from the front of the plugin plates rather than at the rear of the console. This is done to provide a less contaminated signal and better fidelity. The result, with the front door down, is that in a quiet listening room the very slight ticking of the clock timer can be heard, especially with very low level detailed program material. I finally lifted the transport up, found the red and orange wires leading to the timer and removed them.
Now to test the result I began playing the second tape in this collection, part of No.31 and the complete No.32 which has the most detailed low level detail available and the widest dynamic range I know of. The result was pure sonic bliss, all of the delicate nuances of Vadym's playing during the pianissimo passages were there undisturbed. Then the dramatic forceful fortissimo sections were revealed in full, undistorted transient glory. Without the ticking there was just authentic wide dynamic range, not a hint of signal clipping or tape print through. For me this is a tape that every prospective tape deck manufacturer or tape playback preamp designer should have in their evaluation regimen. If there's any hint of distortion then the culprit is elsewhere, not the tape.
 

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