I have heard that song on radio in Sweden, but that’s about it.. It is a very good, beautiful song, and very nice tunes.
You can send my regards to your wife, that she has very good taste of music .
Diverse category of music developed since the mid 90's meeting your description. I don't believe there have been any signs your tastes would expand to current implementations even if they were given higher quality audiophile level releases. By which I mean near ubiquitous qualities are displayed across album releases in a given commercial pop genre only to find true artistic value in remixes and edits that end up being the definitive version to own.
For both your own and Tinka's interests, I'd suggest this is one of the newer offerings worthy of comparison while exemplifying the formulaic example above to a T. It is a "Live on Vogue" performance by London Grammar of a song that was never bettered from this performance in multiple other highly enjoyable versions.
I tried to be quite clear the video was posted on merit of performance quality. A very fine dollar says Condé Nast' capture of that performance was impeccable, for their archives alone, if that is of concern.
Actually a bit surprised you own both formats of "If You Wait" given how small your collection of both combined is.
i have only the vinyl. But as the recording is very likely a digital recording I thought that the CD played back on a digital system might very likely sound better than the LP played back on an analog system.
i long ago procured on vinyl almost everything I had on CD, and I now have only about seven CDs, and three of them are Stereophile Test CDs.
i have only the vinyl. But as the recording is very likely a digital recording I thought that the CD played back on a digital system might very likely sound better than the LP played back on an analog system.
i long ago procured on vinyl almost everything I had on CD, and I now have only about seven CDs, and three of them are Stereophile Test CDs.
Apologies if there was some confusion surrounding picking an example that more closely mirrored an Unplugged or alternate take. These began getting recorded for official/unofficial albums less and performed more often than excessively overplayed radio versions.
I never actually looked into whether Vogue released this LG song on a compilation. Became quite a widespread practice to release this type of studio recording during the pandemic.