0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic. Read 11475 times.
R Swerdlow is correct. When the Beatles first came into the scene, mono was the only technology. As time progressed, albums like Abbey Road and St. Pepper were released in stereo. Lots of other artists where caught in the same time period like Tommy James and the Schondells or even Elvis, Roy Orbison and Frank Sinatra. I think our dearly departed Les Paul had some major influence on multi-tracking and the advent of stereo sound reproduction in the vinyl format, which at the time (other then a few R to R affectionados) was the only way to listen to canned music.I also like the stereo versions.Wayner
audiotom - Would you care to share your impressions on the differences between the two? You have a really good system and it would be nice to hear an avg Joe's impressions of the two products. My wife ordered the stereo version and some books from Amazon, but I'm kind of intrigued by the "way it's intended" argument that alot of the older listeners are putting forth and are familiar with the original sound. I may end up getting both if they reprint, which it sounds like they will.
I remember when there were very few FM stations that broadcast in "stereo" and the little red light would come on! Wow! Sorry If I'm dating my age a little.Wayner
I might be losing my mind, but I am convinced in the late 50's or very early 60's Disney broadcast a stereo version of the "Rite of Spring" excerpt from Fantasia on TV, with one channel of sound on TV and the other on FM.
Back to the Beatles, why would they want mono when the new emerging technology was stereo? Wayner
Anyone get the new box sets of the Beatles recordings? I'm trying to figure out which one to get, mono or stereo. Too young to know the difference in the recordings.
BTW the stereo records were also recorded in mono. Panning mono recorded instruments L or R createdthe stereo "image". AFAIN, mixing down to a stereo pair is what created the stereo.Jeff