Cal Tjader, Stan
Getz, Vince Guaraldi, Eddie Duran, Scott Lafaro, Billy Higgins. FIM LIM UHD 061
LE.
When you’ve got a good thing, there’s nothing for it but
to make it better. That appears to be the philosophy of Winston Ma, president
and owner of FIM (First Impression Music), who supervises the CD remastering of
classic older recordings to today’s most-exacting audiophile standards. And
what more classic a jazz album is there than Sextet, the celebrated 1958 recording with the all-star cast. To
put it mildly, it’s never sounded better for home playback.
The players involved are Cal Tjader, vibes; Stan Getz,
tenor sax; Vince Guaraldi, piano; Eddie Duran, guitar; Scott Lafaro, bass; and
Billy Higgins, drums. Of course, not all of them were at the time as well known
as they are today; but, still, it was a remarkable feat for Fantasy Records to
gather them together for a one-time recording shot. No one figured just how
memorable or how historic the occasion would be.
The session begins with “For All We Know,” which features
Tjader on vibes and Getz eventually coming in on sax, the others providing
accompaniment. It’s a good opening number to showcase the primary stars, and
it’s wonderfully breezy and beautifully played. “My Buddy” follows, with even
more from the bassist and pianist, again with Tjader taking the lead on vibes.
The players had never performed before as a group, yet their contributions are
so seamless, you’d think they had been working together for years.
And so it goes. This is jazz for people who say they don’t
care much for jazz. I mean, how could one resist so affecting a number as their
rendition of “I’ve Grown Accustomed to Her Face” from the then-new stage
musical My Fair Lady? It’s all quite
easy to grow accustomed to when every member of the ensemble is so thoroughly
professional and skilled his position.
While much of the music is laid-back and genial, there is
a particular track that finds the group at its rollicking best: a fast dance
called “Ginza Samba.” They swing in the best sense, backing each other with
supportive figures in a remarkably able fashion. Likewise, after starting the
album in relatively lyric form, the fellows do the final three numbers up
tempo. Pick your mood.
For fun, see if you can make out the words whispered in
the background. Interestingly, too, there were no rehearsals before the
recording date, no alternates, and second takes. Although the album lasts only
forty-two minutes and forty-seven seconds, you can’t help but have a great time
with it.
Fantasy Records made the album at Marines Memorial
Auditorium, San Francisco, California, in February of 1958. FIM (First
Impression Music) and their subsidiary LIM (Lasting Impression Music) brought
the music to the present audiophile UltraHD CD in 2013, using the latest
advances in 32-bit technology for the transfer. Moreover, as it seems that
every time producer Winston Ma releases a new series of discs, he’s added some
new and innovative engineering, this time we get something called Pure
Reflection, or as Ma calls it, putting the two words together, PureFlection.
It’s an improved disc reproduction process that makes replication even more
precise, and which Ma goes on to explain in several pages of detail in the
disc’s accompanying notes. Let it suffice that the technology seems to work,
and we get what Ma claims is a pure reflection of the original. The disc sounds
darned good, so I don’t doubt him.
The modestly close miking used in the original recording
produces a wide stereo spread, and certainly the high-definition UltraHD and
PureFlection systems produce pure, clean sound, no matter that the master tape
is over half a century old. It was obviously good to begin with, and it sounds
good now. The disc opens with Tjader on
vibes, which ring out clearly and dynamically. When he’s joined by Getz on sax,
we hear how really lifelike the instruments sound. Percussion, including piano,
likewise display excellent transient response, and both ends of the frequency
spectrum appear well extended. Just as important, there is a fair amount of
depth to the group, with air and space around the instruments. A good thing
just keeps getting better.
FIM/LIM have packaged the disc in a glossy, foldout,
hardbound book-like case, with notes fastened to the inside and the disc itself
inserted into static-proof liner, further enclosed by a thin cardboard sleeve.
The liner and sleeve make sense for taking the best possible care of the disc,
although it can be something of a pain trying to get the liner back into the
sleeve properly if you’re as clumsy and nearsighted as I am. It’s a small price
to pay for dust and scratch protection.
And speaking of price, don’t forget that these audiophile
products aren’t cheap. Don’t say I didn’t warn you in advance against sticker
shock.
To listen to a brief excerpt from this album, click here:
The regular CD of Stan Getz and carl Tjader has been remastered at 24bit. As any CD can't be greater than 16 bits to play on a normal CD player, one must ask how much better is the 32 bit Cd compared to the 24 bit remastered one? is the price worth the difference? I am wondering if anyone has compared the difference in the sound?
ReplyDeleteOf course, as you say, a regular Redbook CD cannot exceed 16 bits, but the better, clearer, more dynamic the master from which it comes, the better. Although I did not have the regular CD with which to compare this particular new one, I have done numerous such comparisons in the past with other such discs, and never have I found an FIM/LIM or Hi-Q remastering to sound anything but better. And it isn't just the quality of the master from which the CD is made but the quality of the mastering process itself and the final tranfer to compact disc that counts for a lot. For the fastidious audiophile, even the slightest improvement in sound may be worth the higher price.
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