June 1999
One of the nice things about
reviewing CDs from Mobile Fidelity is that the company rarely remasters an album that's a
dud musically. When you've got a fairly limited target market to sell to even under the
best conditions, it doesn't make a whole lot of sense to work on re-releasing tunes that
sucked the first time around. Normally, the remasters I review are ones that I've had for
years and listened to hundreds of times. When I saw John Hiatt's Slow Turning on
the list of new releases, I decided to review it even though I'd never actually heard the
whole recording before. I had a source available for the original CD, I recalled the title
track as being a decent song from radio airtime, and I thought it would be nice to try out
some new music instead of rehashing old favorites.
"Drive South"
- A&M: The clean production here is no surprise when you note industry veteran
Glyn Johns was involved. The bottom-end is a little thin, leading to a somewhat tinny
overall presentation.
- MoFi: There's a significant increase in the realism of the acoustic-guitar parts.
The bass is fattened up a bit, which helps the tonal balance flatten out, albeit still
being somewhat thin.
"Sometime Other Than Now"
- A&M: This really sticks out from the rest of the tracks on the original with
its full frequency extension and dynamics.
- MoFi: Kicks things up another notch in general impact, especially in the low
frequencies. There's better spatial delineation of the many instruments as well.
"Slow Turning"
Would you believe that the last time I heard this song, when it was popular in the late
'80s, I didn't realize who Charlie Watts was? After seeing Charlie up close and larger
than life during the IMAX Rolling Stones concert film, I can really appreciate a reference
to his playing nowadays.
- A&M: Yuck. The soundstage is flat. And the cymbals have that radio-friendly
sizzle that I can't stand. This one certainly sounded better to me on my 1988 stereo (the
little Advents I had at the time were just a little bit less revealing than my current
setup).
- MoFi: The cymbals are much better, but now they're a bit reticent in the mix.
Some restored impact to the bass guitar helps even things out. The biggest improvement is
the way the pieces of the recording fit together in a seamless soundstage. Hiatt's vocals
in particular sound much more like they were recorded in a real room.
The original liner notes are good, with complete lyrics and a couple of pictures.
Mobile Fidelity adds an introduction written by John Hiatt, where he talks a bit about the
recording process and commends the "superduper, gold-plated remastering with
semisonic enhancers and exciters, employed to dizzying effect." I hadn't realized
MoFi's GAIN 2 system used semisonic excitation technology; now I know. A bit of short
background about each song rounds out Hiatt's commentary.
Slow Turning is one of those cool southern-rock recordings that never
degenerates into the sort of twangy material I hate in music with more of a country
influence. A bonus was rediscovering "Paper Thin," a ditty I also recall from
the radio even though the title had long faded from memory. Mobile Fidelity gives a
welcome modernization to Hiatt's sound, which was somewhat unbalanced frequency-wise in
the original CD release.
GO BACK TO:
|