I tend to use my ears Chris. When I hear a muddy, half-rendered song, I say it is badly mastered (or re-mastered). I believe Keith will tell you that some of the early music was exceptionally well recorded. Not wishing to split hairs over the definition of words, I used "recording" to mean what we hear today. I'm afraid it is way to long a story for this forum, but if you are interested to read more, go to http://www.totango.net/
Best wishes, John On 23/11/2011, at 9:49 AM, Chris, UK wrote: >> Maybe you should consider getting some professionally mastered DJ >> quality music for the pleasure of and out of respect for your >> community. > > John, I wonder what makes you think the Golden Age recordings widely > played in milongas were not professionally mastered. > >> I get really disappointed (read, leave early) with badly recorded >> music. There is just no excuse any more. > > The Golden Age orchestras are no longer making recordings. That sounds > like a pretty good excuse to me. > > -- > Chris _______________________________________________ Tango-L mailing list [email protected] http://mailman.mit.edu/mailman/listinfo/tango-l
