Tape Project Albums > Church Windows/Appalachian Spring Suite

1st Impressions for TP-014

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astrotoy:
Got my copy yesterday. I've listened to it as well as the original vinyl releases of both albums. The Church Windows was originally released as a 45RPM vinyl taking up the whole record, while the Copland is 33RPM and one side of the record (the other side is a song cycle by Copland). Here are my first impressions. For both the sonics are typically great - like the two earlier RR releases (Arnold Overtures and Exotic Dances). The Church Windows has the most explosive and spectacular dynamics of all the TP releases so far. The Tam Tam at the end of the second movement is startling in its impact and the vibrations last a long, long time.  The fourth movement, particularly the bass drum whacks at the end also shake the room - with both dynamics and deep, deep bass. Having big full range speakers with a sub helps a lot. Steve W with his pair of Gotham subs will shake the neighborhood. The Copland is a real contrast - a small chamber group, where the music never gets very loud. There is great clarity of sound and hearing the whole piece as originally written gives a sense of the composition beyond the familiar "Simple Gifts" theme at the end.  In both cases, compared to the vinyl, the vinyl sounds more veiled and in the Respighi, less dynamic.  I am using very similar electronics for both tape and vinyl - the Bottlehead Prepro for the tape and the brand new (mine was the first) Bottlehead Phono Pre (with adjustable EQ - though the RR is RIAA). BTW, I was able to check the polarity of both tape and vinyl through my Pacific Microsonics Model Two and Merging Technologies Pyramix software and they are both positive. 

Happy listening - this is definitely not background music.
Larry

ironbut:
I got a little preview of the Copland a few weeks back. I've always loved this piece and I've seen it performed many times as a full orchestra with it's myriad of percussion instruments. I wasn't too sure I was going to enjoy this original version as much. Also, the pace seemed a bit foreign in some passages.
After listening to the tape, those doubts have been dashed.
 
To me, this piece is all about the joys of everyday life in rural America. It could be that the full orchestration that I was used to will seem out of scale now and more suited to the dynamics of city life. And with listening to the entire performance, the pace makes perfect sense now and I have to wonder what I was thinking before.

Maybe it's the way that the instruments are presented on this tape. Each one of them seem to slide in and out of being solo and ensemble. And whether it's the weight of the piano or the richness of the strings that brings them forward, the result is akin to guests at a gathering introducing themselves then slipping back into the group.
There's an amazing detail to the texture of the woodwinds (particularly the clarinet). I can't recall ever being able to listen as deeply into what creates an instrument's timbre as I can with this release. And, I'm sure it'll take a number of listens before I find the bottom of this well.

I've always considered the understated to be the more engaging. And while there are other classical TP tapes that will knock the socks off of a listener during a demo, this is the one that moves me the most.

xcortes:
Got mine today. This one took only 12 days to get here. That's a world record! Can't wait to get home (and, of course, put the kids to sleep!).

JoeG:
Received my copy the other day, and finally had a chance to listen to Reel A. I have a question: was this cut at a lower level than the LP? It seems as though the volume level is lower on the tape than the LP forcing my gain control way up in order to attain the same impactful dynamics as on the LP.

The decay time on the Tam Tam is truly impressive, as are the deep bass notes of the drum whacks at the end.

MylesAstor:
Got my tape this weekend. Hope to spool it up this weekend and give it a listen! Now just wish had some K-S cable in to listen with this weekend :(

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