The Fifth and
Ultimate Version. Arne Domnerus and friends. LIM UHD 071 (3-CD set + DVD).
Here’s the thing: If you who are reading this consider
yourself an audiophile but you don’t own some version of Jazz at the Pawnshop, trust me, you’re not really an audiophile.
It’s been around now in various formats for some four decades, so you’ve had
plenty of chance to hear and obtain it. The recording has developed something
of a cult following among those in the know, and for good reason. Now the folks
at LIM (Lasting Impression Music, a subsidiary of FIM, First Impression Music)
have remastered it for the fifth and probably not last time in a rendering they
understandably claim is the best ever. It’s hard to argue with them; the
performances are first-rate and, more important, the sound is terrific.
But why so many versions? LIM’s owner and producer Winston
Ma explains it in a booklet note: After Proprius Music released the album in
the late Seventies, it became almost an instant hit on LP, followed by a
two-disc CD set in 1984. Proprius (and American AudioSource) continued to
rerelease the set on CD for the next few years, and then in 1997 Winston
stepped in. Sensing a good thing, his company remastered the recording in an
HDCD 24k gold format. Subsequently, he decided to remaster it in every new and
improved disc format that came along, including XRCD and SACD, even obtaining
the original tapes for the second disc that folks for many years thought lost.
Then, in 2007 he did it all over again in K2 HD, convinced that K2 was a
superior Redbook CD format over all others. Sure enough, there was a sonic
improvement. This most current iteration of the product, the “Fifth and Ultimate
Version,” is in UltraHD, the format Winston believes as far advanced as
conventional compact discs can go. What’s more, the new set contains a third
disc of tunes that recording engineer Gert Palmcrantz discovered in his
archives in 1990, later released as Jazz
at the Pawnshop 2, plus a DVD of interviews. In terms of sound and
substance, Winston’s latest UltraHD set is, indeed, the best yet issued. Unless
you want to argue the superiority of vinyl over silver disc, which is another
story entirely.
So, what’s the fuss all about? Jazz at the Pawnshop is some pretty good jazz in some pretty
astounding sound. The album’s producer and engineer visited one of Sweden’s
most-celebrated jazz venues, the Stampen (or The Pawnshop because of a pawnshop
that used to be there), and found its acoustics ideal for recording. Then they
set up their equipment to record live several of Sweden’s most-celebrated jazz
musicians, a quintet that included Arne Dominerus, alto sax and clarinet; Bengt
Hallberg, piano; Larss Erstrand, vibes; Georg Riedel, bass; and Egil Johansen,
drums. After two evenings of recording, they came out with tapes of some of the
best and most realistic-sounding jazz that anyone had ever heard. The
subsequent LP and CD releases took off among audiophiles eager to demonstrate
just how accurate their stereo equipment was when playing back music that live
would have been largely unamplified.
The three discs in the LIM set contain six music tracks
each and a couple of introductions. The numbers run high to jazz standards,
starting with Philip Braham’s “Limehouse Blues.” The quintet play well
together, with Dominerus’s sax tending to dominate the ensemble but with plenty
of room for the other members to shine and solo as well. Because it’s live, in
the background we hear quite a lot of room noise, the clinking of glasses,
shuffling of feet, occasional applause, audience comments, and conversation.
One goes into Jazz at the Pawnshop
for the music, certainly, but also for the vivid sound, which involves experiencing
the ambience of the small club itself.
And so it goes throughout the eighteen selections, like
the traditional “High Life,” Louis Armstrong’s “Struttin’ with Some Barbeque,”
Johnny Hodges’s “Jeep’s Blues,” George Gershwin’s “Lady Be Good,” Charlie
Parker’s “Barbados,” Morgan Lewis’s “How High the Moon,” Matt Dennis’s
“Everything Happens to Me,” Harold Arlen’s “Over the Rainbow,” Charlie Parker’s
“Now’s the Time,” Duke Ellington’s “In a Mellow Mood,” Bill Strayhorn’s “Take
the ‘A’ Train,” and Harry Warren’s “Jeepers Creepers,” among others.
The package concludes with a DVD containing brief
interviews with two of the music’s participants: Lars Estrand and Georg Riedel, the interviews playable with or
without subtitles.
In keeping with the importance of such an undertaking, LIM
have packaged the four-disc set rather elaborately. The glossy, hard-cardboard
case opens up in four sections, an inner sleeve fastened to each segment,
within which lie the discs, each in its own static-free liner, the whole affair
further housed in a handsome slipcover. The only trouble with this arrangement
is that it leaves no place for the thirty-page booklet insert except loose
inside. Open up the package, and you’re likely to have the booklet fall in your
lap. Apart from that minor oversight, it’s a nifty layout.
Producer Jacob Boethius and recording engineer Gert
Palmcrantz made the album on location at the Stampen (Pawnshop) Jazz Club in
Stockholm, Sweden in December of 1976. The club’s excellent acoustics and the
simplicity of the miking probably led to the results that have been pleasing
audiophiles all these years: Neumann U47, KM56, and M49 microphones, two Dolby
A361 noise-reductions units, two Nagra IV recorders, a Studer mixing board, and
two old Ampex loudspeakers with built-in amplifiers. Remarkable, given that
sonically this antique array puts most of today’s state-of-the-art digital
equipment to shame.
I had on hand the original Proprius set from AudioSource,
CDP 7778/9, for comparison, putting one Proprius disc and one LIM disc into
separate CD players (Sony and Yamaha), adjusting for output and switching them
out occasionally to be sure I was listening to the sound of the discs and not
the machines.
The first thing I noticed was that both the Proprius and
LIM exhibit an outstanding dimensionality, space, and air. You can hear in and
around the instruments in a most convincingly lifelike manner. Both display
exemplary transient quickness, too, and strong dynamic impact. Where the new
LIM scores over its rival is in its overall greater smoothness, marginally
superior, more-truthful warmth, more-extended high-end response, and tauter,
crisper bass. These characteristics lend the LIM product an upper hand in
listenability as well as naturalness. Then, after a while I could sense that
the LIM rendered a more potent force on drums and displayed slightly wider
dynamics. The more I listened, the less of a contest it became, with the LIM
sounding better to me in almost every sonic category. Given the already high quality
of the Proprius discs, that's quite a compliment to the LIM. Of course, we
should not expect less, given the extremely high cost of the new LIM set, but
maybe that's yet another story.
To listen to a brief excerpt from this album, click here:
JJP
This is the type of review I was looking for - a genuine A/B comparison. Thanks heaps.
ReplyDeletei just ordered a Limited Ultimate Edition Ultra HD on Elusive Disc, i can't wait for the set to arrive in Belgium :-)
ReplyDelete