To me, the Nonesuch and Brilliant Classics set sound far better - to my likes and dislikes - than the Unicorn one. Also too my ears, they don't sound even remotely alike. I vastly prefer both the Nonesuch and Brilliant Classics recordings. I've never liked the Unicorn one...
Barry
The dynamics on the Brilliant issue is totally different from the Unicorn one.
Steen
Then we seem to have a mystery on our hands. Over the weekend, I listened again to my two CD versions of the Horenstein/LSO M3 (Unicorn and Brilliant Classics) on sophisitcated, high-resolution audio gear, and heard not the slightest degree of difference. Spectral balance was the same, imaging was the same, and dynamic range was the same. When loaded into ProTools, the two sets of waveform graphs matched precisely, giving objective confirmation to what I heard.
I've since had the following Email exchange with Gunter Van Rompaey of Brilliant Classics:
* * *
James Meckley to Gunter Van Rompaey:I have a question about the contents of your boxed set of Mahler symphonies (#99549), specifically about the recording of the third symphony, by Jascha Horenstein and the London Symphony. Is your release a direct copy of the original Unicorn CD, or did you remaster or re-equalize it in some way? In other words, should I expect your CD of this symphony to sound exactly like the original Unicorn CD, or might I expect it to sound different in some way?
Sincerely, etc., etc.Gunter Van Rompaey to James Meckley:Thanks for your inquiry. I can indeed confirm that the recording has not been remastered and is the same as the licensed one from Unicorn. I hope this information is useful to you.
Best regards,
Gunter Van Rompaey
Team Brilliant Classics* * *
So Brilliant says they're the same and they sound exactly the same to me, yet others have heard significant, even dramatic, differences. I don't understand what's going on here.
James
P.S.
Of course, Tony Duggan is correct—there
were two sets of microphones deployed during the original recording sessions, but that has no bearing on the issue at hand. One set was Bob Auger's, for Unicorn-Kanchana. The other set was Jerry Bruck's, for his own purposes.
Mr. Auger's tape has been used for the following:
1) The initial Unicorn LP release
2) The Nonesuch LP release
3) The Advent CrO
2 (chromium dioxide) Dolby B cassette release—remember those?
4) The Barclay-Crocker quarter-track open-reel tape release
5) The Unicorn CD release
6) The Brilliant Classics CD release
Mr. Bruck's tape has never seen any commercial release.
JM