Awash in a sea of echo
A techno geek | Kihei, Maui, HI USA | 05/05/2005
(3 out of 5 stars)
"Mobile Fidelity has done a great job with the SACD transfer of the analog original. It's how all SACDs should be done. And this seems to be a good performance of the Planets. But the original recording was made in such a cavernous hall, with microphones so distant from the instruments, that the recording is awash in echo. The echo softens all the attacks, and individual instrumental solos are too faint, so much of the impact of the score is lost. If psychoacoustically, you like the feeling of an immense concert hall, this recording is superlative. Being a trombonist, I prefer to sit in the orchestra itself to listen. The early London FFRR recordings had the philosophy of close miking of all the instruments, making you feel in the middle of the orchestra. Later, there seemed to be a fashion of more distant miking to give a big concert hall sound. This recording epitomizes that approach. I was going to buy the St. Louis Symphony series from Mobile Fidelity, but now I wonder whether all the recordings are like this."
Cosmic Masterpiece
Seth Giddings | Across the Universe... | 09/14/2004
(5 out of 5 stars)
"Performed by The Saint Louis Symphony Orchestra and conducted by Walter Susskind, Mobile Fidelity Sound Lab's (MFSL) multichannel debut of Holst's The Planets is a remarkable and stunning revelation within the aural cosmos. Utilizing MFSL's heralded GAIN 2 (Greater Ambient Information Network) proprietary mastering process, the compelling contrast between the thunderous, enraged "Mars" and the refined pomp and beauty of "Venus" is unveiled in spectacular sonic splendor. Gustav Holst's deep understanding and inspired interpretation of Astrology, Mythology, and the Greek influenced "Music of the Spheres" is illustrated here in meticulous, spacious surround sound on the most technologically advanced sound reproduction media format to date - the Ultradisc UHR? Surround SACD. The fact is that MFSL's exploration of the sonic universe has often been likened to NASA's research in space - utilizing the greatest technological achievement possible to unveil greater mysteries. So it stands to reason that Mobile Fidelity Sound Lab, who illuminated The Dark Side of the Moon with its definitive versions of that classic album, will now unveil the The Planets..."
MoFi weaves its magic again
J. S. Bower | UK | 04/11/2010
(5 out of 5 stars)
"I didn't know whether to laugh or cry at the comments of the erstwhile first reviewer, but respectfully suggest he should go back to listening from within his brass section. He obviously has a bee in his bonnet about recordings where the mikes are not stuffed up the musicians' trouser-legs. The rest of us can be left to safely enjoy naturally recordings like this, which are startlingly good at reconstructing orchestral perspectives from the sort of position that most listeners pay to sit in.
I paid top dollar for this recording on SACD, and it was simply worth every penny. MoFi classical recuts are disappearing fast, and prices are going through the roof. If you need evidence of why this is, look no further...
These are very solid performances from Susskind and the St Louis, but the recording is the star here. The Elite recordings from Aubort and Nickrenz are simply some of the finest analogue (or any) recordings of orchestras in real acoustic spaces ever made. And Mobile Fidelity, as always, has done them justice, in full. The results are startlingly realistic sounding in timbre, coherence, transparency and staging. They simply sound truer to life of real orchestras than most recordings you will ever be fortunate enough to hear. And I speak as a frequent aficionado of classical concerts in and around London.
On a good SACD-based system, this is a marvel. It's by far the finest recorded Planets available on SACD or, indeed any medium since the golden days of analogue. No, the performance doesn't carry the panache, menace and colour of Previn's great LSO performance on EMI, but what does?
That reminds me. By the way, a note to whatever faceless bunch of corporate jockies own the rights to EMI recordings this week. Why not allow access to them so we can hear their magic again, this time on SACD? Our original vinyl pressings are wearing out...!
So, buy this one whilst you can."