What is the best sounding vinyl?


Please post your recommendations.

:thumbsup:

klimt

Sheffield Lab is about the best vinyl recording I’ve ever heard.  The original vinyl from the late 70’s is getting harder to find.  A company called Nautilus recorded some very good stuff.  Look for titles “The Three” & L.A. 4 Pavane Pour Une Infante Defunte”  I worked in a HiFi store in the 70’s that sold Direct to Disk & Japanese pressings.  I sold a lot of equipment using Dave Grusin’s Discovered Again recording.

@seymour-krelborn  couple Jazz albums: The Blues and The Abstract Truthfeatures many great Jazz musicians together:  Bill Evans, Roy Haynes, Eric Dolphy, Oliver Nelson, Paul Chambers, Freddie Hubbard.  If you like piano I highly recommend a phenomenal album by Ryo Fukui - Scenery - Track 3 called Early Summer and the whole album is great.

I can only comment on record labels that are current and still producing records like  Intervention Records and Speakers Corner Records out of Germany. 

Also, the Dave Rawlings and Gillian Welch owned Acony Records/Woodland Studios. 

And of course Analog Productions. 

Just about any recording from the Japanese label East Wind will sound very good; those that are direct to disc are particularly good but one would have to buy originals to reap the benefit of direct to disc.  For example, search for the Great Jazz Trios “Direct From L.A.” 

For classical, consistently the best sounding label was Lyrita.  However, their catalogue was limited to U.K. composers.  Also good were 1950-60’s RCA, Mercury Records, and Decca/London classical records.

I forgot about Windham Hill Records as sonically many of them are first rate (just depends upon your personal taste - I like a handful of them).

 

DeKay