Master Quality Reel To Reel Tape!
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"When Martha Argerich walked into the studio it was her dark, smouldering looks which first struck me. As soon as she arrived she asked for coffee; when I offered her a cup she gulped it down in one go and asked for more. I sat her in the studio with a large pot of coffee and went into the control room. At first, her hands moved casually over the keyboard as she tested the piano. Then she launched into Chopin's Polonaise Op. 53. I sat up in my chair with a long drawn out 'Jee-sus' - the balance engineer said 'Wow!'" - producer Suvi Raj Grubb
Martha Argerich has been described as "unquestionably one of the greatest pianists of all time." She recorded this recital in 1965, shortly after her victory in the prestigious Chopin Competition, but it only became available in 1999. "Argerich was quite the most formidable player we had ever come across," said Grubb. "I smiled as I recollected Clara Schumann's remark to Brahms about the Paganini Variations, regretting that it was beyond a woman pianist's capability. Nothing would have been beyond this woman."
All this adds up to a recording that is indeed legendary.
Recorded in the Abbey Roads Studios, London, in 1965.
WHAT EXACTLY IS AN 'ORIGINAL MASTER TAPE'?
Good question. The term is sometimes misused or misinterpreted, so it's worth getting clear on what's what. When an album is recorded, whether in the studio or on stage, it will either be a multi-track recording using several microphones and/or different
sessions to record each individual element separately (instruments, vocals), or a live or semi-live recording in which one or several microphones capture the performance as a whole. The recording engineers will then bring the various elements together,
editing and mixing them to achieve the desired sound and to remove unwanted noise, culminating in the album's first final arrangement. This is the original studio master tape, of which there will be not just one, but several: each of these is considered
an 'original master'.
This original master is then used as the 'blueprint' for all subsequent copies, pressings, remasterings, etc. But of course with each subsequent treatment, something of the original information and hence sound quality is lost. Which is why nothing sounds quite like the original studio master tape. It's the original source of the album in its completed state.
DOES HORCH HOUSE DO ANY KIND OF REMASTERING DURING THE COPYING PROCESS?
Absolutely not! Why mess with the best? The whole point of what they do lies in capturing the magic of the original analogue master tape in its purest, most faithful form possible.
'Remastering' can be compared to using computer software to edit an original photograph. The benefits are that you can remove unwanted marks or noise, clean things up, remove distortion and boost clarity. The downside is that in doing so, you often lose the natural essence of the original and the result can seem rather synthetic, lacking in real life character.
The unfortunate fact is that tapes, like photographs, do tend to age over time, and most analogue masters are now between 30-80+ years old.
So Horch House undertake a painstaking 'soft refurbishing' process, which is key to recapturing the original quality of a master tape.
CAPTURING THE MAGIC OF MASTER TAPE
How exactly does Horch House translate an original analogue master tape into faithful copies on reel-to-reel tape and vinyl records?
They use a process that's been meticulously researched and developed by their expert team of sound engineers, with input from some of the world's leading specialists.
The first step is to carefully assess the sound quality of the original master tape, which their experts do in great detail. The unfortunate fact is that tapes do tend to age over time, and most analogue masters are now between 30-80+ years old. What they're looking to do, therefore, as an integral part of their copying process, is to restore the sound quality back to its original level. They want you to hear exactly what the first sound engineers heard (and indeed the musicians themselves), on the day that the original recording was made. This is in stark contrast to any kind of 'remastering', which they most definitely do not do! They're not looking to 'improve' the recording in any way, but rather to return it as closely as possible to its full original beauty.
They call this their 'soft refurbishing' process.
HOW CLOSE ARE HORCH HOUSE COPIES TO THE ORIGINAL MASTER TAPES?
Horch House believe that they're as close as it's possible to get - not simply to the master tape in its current condition, but to that master tape's original condition. Thanks to their detailed 'soft refurbishing' process, their master tape copies
could, in a sense, now be considered as better than the current originals because they've been lovingly restored to deliver the same sound quality that the originals had on the day they were first recorded.
WHAT ABOUT COPYRIGHT? ARE MASTER TAPE COPIES LEGAL?
All Horch House master tape copies are fully authorized, licensed and approved by the relevant record label/music publisher.
** It is standard practice in all recording studios to keep the tape "tail out". This reduces "pre-echo" and it means that the tape should be placed on the right hand side of the recorder, re-wound and then played.
Features
- Studio Master Copy
- 2-Reel Tape
- Tape Material: RTM SM900
- Recording Speed: 15IPS - 38cm/sec
- Rec. Level (mag flux): 510 nWb/m
- Equalisation: CCIR
- Width & Tracks: 1/4" - 2 Track
- Reels: Metal - 10.5" - 26,5 cm
- Production on Studer Machines Refurbished to Factory Specification
- Handmade
- Fully Authorized, Licensed & Approved by the Record Label/Music Publisher
- Horch House Deluxe Packaging
Musicians
Martha Argerich | piano |
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Selections
Frederic Chopin (1810-1849)
Piano Sonata No. 3 in B minor, Op. 58
- I. Allegro Maestoso
- II. Scherzo: Molto Vivace
- III. Largo
- IV. Finale: Presto, Non Tanto
- Mazurka No. 36 in A minor, Op. 59 No. 1
- Mazurka No. 37 in A flat, Op. 59 No. 2
- Mazurka No. 38 in F Sharp minor, Op. 59 No. 3
- Nocturne No. 4 in F, Op. 15, No. 1
- Scherzo No. 3 in C Sharp minor, Op. 39
- Polonaise No. 6 in A flat, Op. 53