The compressed “White album”

14 Responses

  1. Nicki says:

    Surely this means both US mixes – pre and post George – sound different to the UK mix. I can believe George made the US mix sound more like what was in his head or even on a UK LP that perhaps was lying around, but surely it wouldn't be absolutely identical? Or is it?

  2. Asp says:

    I guess the mix is the same in the UK and US but the mastering is different.

  3. Unknown says:

    I had no idea about this. First thing that popped into my head was what Nicki asked. Good thing George caught it though–imagine.

  4. Mary says:

    Thank you for this info! Great

  5. Jeff Gold says:

    Nice article. I'm assuming you thought to write this because of my Ebay sale of the copy you've pictured on Tuesday. As you used my photo of the front cover without credit, perhaps you'd like to provide a link to my website, Recordmecca.com, where I sell music collectibles and rare records like this. Best, Jeff Gold

  6. wogew says:

    Sure Jeff – no problem! Did it sell?

  7. Jeff Gold says:

    Yes, pretty quickly. First one I've ever found. Best, Jeff

  8. wogew says:

    It never rains, it pours…

  9. wogew says:

    On our Facebook page, David Heselden writes: You don't need to pay mega bucks here at all. Look for an early 70's USA Apple Winchester Pressing with Mastered By Capitol on the dead wax! It's exactly the same pressing with the compressed mix!

  10. daveidmarx says:

    I've been lucky enough to find a few A-28 matrix White Albums over the past few years and even sent a needledrop of the best one (vg+) to Doug sulpy of the 910 who said it was the most "musical" pressing he'd ever heard (inagine that!) However, upon analysis (covered in an issue of the 910), he concluded that there really wasn't much (if any) difference between that pressung and a standard pressing, save perhaps a slight speed difference (although, no two pressings of the album are exactly the same speed, as Rutherford Chang's White Album x 100 has shown us).

  11. daveidmarx says:

    This comment has been removed by the author.

  12. beatlesfanfromsop says:

    I purchased a white album lp yesterday,and it is an apple release with the capitol logo on sides 2 and 4.
    The number on the front cover is 1047279.
    Would someone know if this would be a copy with the compressed stereo mix?

  13. Tim Goldich says:

    Harrison's reaction to over-compression is the same as mine. I don't like it. Except now, almost everything is way over compressed (so it will sound "louder" so it will sell better). I especially love the Blu-ray versions of Sgt. Pepper and the White Album partly because, unlike the CDs, no extra compression was added.

  14. Tim Goldich says:

    One thing few people seem to understand is how poorly sound transfers from one analog tape machine to another, even when the tape machines were state-of-the-art. By far the one main reason that the new mixes sound so much better is that the sound is derived from the first-generation multitrack tapes and mixed in the digital domain with no tape-to-tape transferring and therefore no generation loss in the mixing process.

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