UHQR 45 rpm Vinyl "Kind of Blue"


I got a call from my friend saying his heart sank after hearing this. Utter sadness and disappointment. I didn’t have time to get there since it was late in the evening, so I said I’d come the following morning. Equipment used....

1.Yamaha AS3000 integrated amplifier with an amazing built in phono preamp.

2. Turntable Technics 1200GR2 new

3. Nagaoka MP500 cartridge new

4. Volti Audio Razz speakers

We also have two stereo copies of Kind of Blue on vinyl by Columbia 33 rpm and of course digital using a Denefrips Venus II.

This is the second time I’ve listened to an LP by this company and it will be the last. It amazes me this is $150 plus shipping and sounds absolutely deplorable. All this hype people have made this out to be makes me seriously question the credibility of numerous reviews. Obviously this can’t be returned but this LP isn’t even close to the stereo 33 rpm’s by Columbia when comparing them all. Even the digital was better. There is so much nonsense in this industry about promises of great things.

This was a factory sealed copy from MusicDirect. First off, the album has a grainy floor noise. This album lacks balance, placing Bill Evan’s piano to the back of the soundstage. The bass is also too much and while Jimmy Cobb’s drum symbols sound airy, the rest of the band sounds dull, lifeless and lacks proper dynamics. The ambiances are simply lacking altogether and it astonishes me anyone expresses what a great example this 45 rpm UHQR is. It’s a joke, forgive my frustration. 

Both Columbia versions in just standard 33 rpm were far superior, displaying beautiful balance, airy nuances, richness and sweetness by comparison. Even the digital was superior. Huge disappointment!

rankaudio

I have not heard the 45 version. I do have the 33 version. I think it sounds wonderful. Slightly better than the Classic Records version I've owned for 20 years.The UHQR was cut from the same stereo master tape Classic Records made for their version. A gentle reminder that the trumpet is not a reed instrument. The mute Miles often uses does give it a spitty quality occasionally. The two saxophones, however, do get rather spitty throughout the album. I have noticed saxes getting spitty when playing in certain registers at quiet volumes on other recordings as well.  

Denon DL103

Graham tonearm

VPI MK IV

Klyne SK5 preamp

Spectral amp

Snell C/V

MIT cables

I own the LP and the CD.  Love them both  but to be honest, In A Silent Way gets far more play in my house.  

My Analog Productions UHQR 33 RPM copy sounds excellent. No noise. Well balanced recording. Nothing really sticks out. Nice resolution. 
I’m not familiar with the 45 RPM UHQR version. 
I have Kind of Blue on a 45 RPM MFSL as well. Different sound but also very good. 

Hi,

I have the 33.5 RPM and 45 RPM versions from Analog Production UHQR, as well as the MOFI 45 RPM version of this fantastic Kind of Blue recording. I think they're all fantastic, rich in detail, and have a decent bass. I think, but I'm not sure, that there's a small problem with your system, or perhaps the Nagaoka cartridge isn't up to the task. I don't know.

My system:

SME Model 10 turntable with SME Series IV tonearm
Cartridges: Benz Micro LP - Dynavector DV XX2 - MK2 - Benz Micro Ruby 2 Open Air and Supex 900 Super
Phono preamp: Benz Micro PP1 T9 and Audio Analogue AAPhono
Integrated amplifier: Audio Analogue Maestro 2.0
Speakers: Sonus Faber Olympica II

Regards

Alessandro