Do classical CDs made from early analog tapes sound better on your system than new CDs?


I find that classical CDs produced from analog recordings originally made in the late 50’s and early 60’s really make my system sing, and, by far, give me the best sound staging over most modern recordings.  This is especially true in those produced in the pre-Dolby era.  The overtones are just there in abundance and the space is endless and real.
 I’m wondering if others have that experience.
128x128rvpiano
Maybe one of you could start it?
(dontcha just love people with "big ideas" that make work for others? :-)

I note Jazz Aficionados clearly benefits from Orpheus’ "moderating", so time and attention (not to mention subject matter expertise!) are helpful for keeping things on track.

Jazz for aficionados is very unique.  Nearly 5 years old, over 10,000 posts and it remains interesting,  insightful and thought provoking. Many good recording recommendations although with the jazz genre this isn't difficult as there's a true wealth of excellent material. With the caliber of contributors such as the OP, frontman and others this inconsistency  is no surprise. 
Charles  
I would be interested in starting such a classical discussion forum.
Does anyone know how to go about it?
Rvpiano,
Between you, Al and Schubert, you 3 could certainly get it off to a good start.
Charles
+1 to charles1dad’s tacit nominations...that’s a good core of experts to start with. I’m sure there are others who will join in. Maybe even Frogman and Orpheus.

@rvpiano
Use Jazz Aficionados as a template. Start a new thread (just as you did here) and "prime the pump" by naming some of your own favorite classical recordings. Details about composer/composition, orchestra, conductor, recording label, maybe even venue...all grist for the mill. Finding samples that can be linked to on YouTube - icing on the cake (if you will permit me to mix pump, mill and cake figures of speech in one paragraph).

c1d is right about Jazz Afic., but it started out with one single post.