The first music CD I play on any new system

joelll
joelll Posts: 120
edited February 2006 in Music & Movies
Yow... a new forum...this could be fun!

Since I appear to be somewhere near the first non-moderator posting here, I'll start with my favorite CD for playing first every time I set up a new system or after moving or major alterations to one of my current systems (bedroom, livingroom, study or HT).

Long, long ago, probably 1986 or so, I bought a Mobile Fidelity Sound Labs CD ("Original Master Recording", gold CD surface, goofy jewel case mechanism and all) of Pink Floyd's "Dark Side of the Moon" album. My vinyl copy (which i still have, one of the first record albums I ever bought, back in 1979) wasn't sounding so good with a few scratches, so I snapped it up.

After thousands of plays, Dark Side of the Moon is still my favorite rock album. And it utterly, totally rocks my world when played through my vintage Polk Monitor 12s.

MFSL is now sadly out of business, but I've been able to find a few more of their discs at the used-record stores. They were fanatics about music reproduction, and it shows. I've picked up a few more of their CD's from used-record stores, even though they get marked up a bit because of their slight rarity.

joelll
Post edited by joelll on
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Comments

  • TrappedUnder Ice
    TrappedUnder Ice Posts: 975
    edited September 2001
    When I brought home my new 2000i's other day.. first cd I did was RUSH- Power windows... very sweet> and its the remastered one also:cool:
  • wangotango68
    wangotango68 Posts: 1,056
    edited September 2001
    when i bought my 2.3's from russ in georgia i put in dream theater "awake".

    scott:cool:
  • I-SIG
    I-SIG Posts: 2,243
    edited September 2001
    I put in Peral Jam's Ten. I know it's not a great recording or anything, but I have listened to that CD so many times, I know exactly when and how it sounds right. If I don't like how it sounds, then the system ain't right, IMHO.

    Wes
    Link: http://polkarmy.com/forums

    Sony 75" Bravia 4K | Polk Audio SDA-SRS's (w/RDO's & Vampire Posts) + SVS PC+ 25-31 | AudioQuest Granite (mids) + BWA Silver (highs) | Cary Audio CAD-200 | Signal Cable Silver Resolution XLR's | Rotel Michi P5 | Signal Cable Silver Resolution XLR's | Cambridge Audio azur 840C--Wadia 170i + iPod jammed w/ lossless audio--Oppo 970 | Pure|AV PF31d
  • George Grand
    George Grand Posts: 12,258
    edited September 2001
    I often wondered about this. While growing up, I had many systems that were certainly NOT state of the art. Lot's of musical pleasure, but ultimately revealing? No. Soooo...

    Is the "sound" I have been chasing after accurate, or just the sound I became so accustomed to over time that it became my reference?

    Example: My favorite ALBUM, is "Hot Rats" by Zappa. When the cd was made available, I was listening to MUCH better equipment than I had been listening to the VINYL version on. I was really disappointed. Where was the bass? Where did the little percussive fills that he was SO famous for go?

    Anybody see where I'm going (other than crazy)? I'm referring to Wes' post, not the other posts which are valid. It's the way Wes said, "I know when and how it sounds right".

    George Grand (of the Jersey Grand's)
  • Strong Bad
    Strong Bad Posts: 4,278
    edited September 2001
    Pink Floyd DSOTM is still without a doubt my favorite CD to listen to, especially on my SRS 2.3's. When I brought them home about a year ago, I launched them with the song "Time".

    Thats the first CD I ever bought about 17 years ago. I've since replaced the original copy with the newer remastered version. I never grow tired of it.

    John
    No excuses!
  • RuSsMaN
    RuSsMaN Posts: 17,986
    edited September 2001
    Pink Floyd, The Final Cut
    Rush, Farewell to Kings
    Chris Rea, Road to Hell
    Joe Walsh, The Confessor
    Dave Matthews Band, Crash

    I'll stop there, thats 5 times what you wanted already. Spent 4 hours with the Norh 9.0, and Av-Reality 3D today....I'm whooped.....

    Cheers,
    Russ

    CANT WAIT for the bookshelf Lsi's brotha....
    Check your lips at the door woman. Shake your hips like battleships. Yeah, all the white girls trip when I sing at Sunday service.
  • gidrah
    gidrah Posts: 3,049
    edited September 2001
    1. Mike Oldfield - Tubular Bells. Wide range.
    2. Thelonius Monk - Live at the It. Great soundstage.
    3. Led Zeppelin - II. Really loud to rejoice by rockin' the house.
    Make it Funky! :)
  • TroyD
    TroyD Posts: 13,083
    edited September 2001
    Peter Murphy - Deep and/or Cascade
    Boston - Third Stage
    DMB - Crash
    Pink Floyd - DSOTM

    A little something for every taste there I suppose. Peter Murphy "Cuts You Up" is always the first song I listen to and new setup.

    Troy
    I plan for the future. - F1Nut
  • scottvamp
    scottvamp Posts: 3,277
    edited September 2001
    Very cool pic scott (Dream Theater). That will make your speaker dance. I don't really get alot of the classic rock only because most of the cd recording are crap. Very low unseperated sound. Unless we are talking about some new digital sound remastered stuff. They might sound good. I like my stuff- anyone here of Theater Of Tragedy - mind blowing music.LATER :cool:
  • rskarvan
    rskarvan Posts: 2,374
    edited October 2001
    John Strong,

    Be careful with DSOTM "Time" with your 2.3's.
    It has the potential for being hell on your SL3000 tweets.
    I smoked an SL3000 tweeter 4 years into the Polk warranty playing "Time" on my SDA 3.1TL's. Nothing scarrier than seeing & smelling smoke come out a set of signature Polks. Chills.
    Even while smoking - they still sounded fine (scarey). I would
    have thought the thermal protection circuit would have protected them (not with "Time").

    Here is where I put in a plug for Polk Audio customer service.
    The dealer replaced both sets (R&L) of tweeters on my 3.1TL's.
    He said... "you can't have an un-matched set now".
    I've been extraordinarily careful with my tweets ever since.

    That was so cool.
    I had to go home and fetch the working tweeter for the warranty return. I would have NEVER suspected that kind of service.
    Personally, I believe Floyd's TIME should be exempt from tweeter warranty service. Thats really pushing the limits of what a tweeter should be reasonably expected to reproduce. Ringgggg.

    Since that event, I have purchased a CS400, FX500, RT25i, and PSW650 from Polk (and a set of 4 drivers for Monitor 10's).
    Micah, if customer service ever gets "el-cheapo" on warranty repairs - show them this post.
  • Strong Bad
    Strong Bad Posts: 4,278
    edited October 2001
    Ron:

    I hear you on that song, Time. Very demanding on tweeters. Luckily my SRS 2.3's have a 3 tweeter array per side to handle the load. Still, I'm a little tame with the volume on that beginning. I love it though. I love the entire album.

    I really wish Pink Floyd would reunite (with Roger Waters) and put out another album.

    John
    No excuses!
  • I-SIG
    I-SIG Posts: 2,243
    edited October 2001
    I think that was a complement, not on my music choice though :-)

    Wes
    Link: http://polkarmy.com/forums

    Sony 75" Bravia 4K | Polk Audio SDA-SRS's (w/RDO's & Vampire Posts) + SVS PC+ 25-31 | AudioQuest Granite (mids) + BWA Silver (highs) | Cary Audio CAD-200 | Signal Cable Silver Resolution XLR's | Rotel Michi P5 | Signal Cable Silver Resolution XLR's | Cambridge Audio azur 840C--Wadia 170i + iPod jammed w/ lossless audio--Oppo 970 | Pure|AV PF31d
  • George Grand
    George Grand Posts: 12,258
    edited October 2001
    Wes,
    I'm not sure it was a compliment. How long have you had OUTSTANDING equipment? Not that long right? How long have you been listening to that piece of music? Long time right?

    All I am saying is, if we familiarize ourselves with a particular piece of music while we own less capable equipment, are we looking for that SAME sound on better equipment. It's a question I've posed to myself quite a few times.

    Did I come to ENJOY the distorted sound of lesser equipment?

    I'm not sure I'm getting my idea across.

    George Grand (of the Jersey Grand's)
  • Tour2ma
    Tour2ma Posts: 10,177
    edited January 2003
    Old thread, no one will ever see it, but WTH, I love this kind of stuff:

    1st system - Rod Stewart "I'm Losing You"
    Upgrade 1 - ELP "Lucky Man"
    UpG 2 (my Polk's) - Pink Floyd "Money"
    UpG 3 - Alex Harvey Band "Faithhealer"
    UpG 4 - Talking Heads DVD "Psycho Killer"
    UpG 5 - TBD....
    More later,
    Tour...
    Vox Copuli
    Better to remain silent and be thought a fool, than to open your mouth and remove all doubt. - Old English Proverb

    "Death doesn't come with a Uhaul." - Dennis Gardner

    "It's easy to get lost in price vs performance vs ego vs illusion." - doro
    "There is a certain entertainment value in ripping the occaisonal (sic) buttmunch..." - TroyD
  • dthomps
    dthomps Posts: 352
    edited January 2003
    I hear everyone with all this Pink Floyd, man this is cool. I just cant believe no one has said anything about "Wish You Were Here" one of the greatest tunes of all time IMHO. I also dig "Time" a lot too. The first song I played after I got my 2000's was Crash by DMB. After I listened to the rest of the CD, I poped in "Under The Table And Dreaming" which is one good album. I definitely gave my speakers a workout that night.
    George-
    I totally hear ya about your quest for the same old sound- I really got dissappointed when I listened to a few of my older albums on my dads 2 ch. rig for the first time ( at the tender age of 18, when I first started to care about great sound, not just loud noise ) I played a few by Led Zeppelin, and U2, and cant remember the rest, but I thought for sure I would be smiling ear to ear really "hearing" the music for the first time, but was shocked to also hear the flaws for the first time, too. I do have to say I wish I didnt know they existed :D take care. Mike
  • Billm57
    Billm57 Posts: 689
    edited January 2003
    Originally posted by George Grand
    I often wondered about this. While growing up, I had many systems that were certainly NOT state of the art. Lot's of musical pleasure, but ultimately revealing? No. Soooo...

    Is the "sound" I have been chasing after accurate, or just the sound I became so accustomed to over time that it became my reference?

    Example: My favorite ALBUM, is "Hot Rats" by Zappa. When the cd was made available, I was listening to MUCH better equipment than I had been listening to the VINYL version on. I was really disappointed. Where was the bass? Where did the little percussive fills that he was SO famous for go?

    Anybody see where I'm going (other than crazy)? I'm referring to Wes' post, not the other posts which are valid. It's the way Wes said, "I know when and how it sounds right".

    George Grand (of the Jersey Grand's)
    a little off topic but I think the Hot Rats CD release is much better than any vinyl version of it. I have heard both on the same system. You even get a longer intro on Gumbo Variations which wasnt on the vinyl. Anyway great album/cd..one of Zappa's best
  • Zen Dragon
    Zen Dragon Posts: 501
    edited January 2003
    Originally posted by George Grand
    I often wondered about this. While growing up, I had many systems that were certainly NOT state of the art. Lot's of musical pleasure, but ultimately revealing? No. Soooo...

    Is the "sound" I have been chasing after accurate, or just the sound I became so accustomed to over time that it became my reference?


    George Grand (of the Jersey Grand's)

    I know exactly what you mean. Whenever you spend a lot of time with a recording and a system it just does not sound right if it is heard from a different source.
    You can have a favorite piece, and you know just how that bass note should hit, just how smooth the brass section should rise up to assault you, and if you hear it on a diff system it immediately is not right.
    Of course the owner of the other system prob thinks the same thing about your system. Is there a right or wrong?
    Who knows, it just depends on what part of the piece we enjoy, and our listening/hearing preferences.
    I just love a solid mid-range that can seemlessly rise up into a soaring high, sort of like you here on Floyds wish you were here, and if a speaker can't do it the way I'm used to my Polks doing it...well who the hell knows what it means, it just don't sound right.
    The Family
    Polk SDA-1C's
    Polk SDA-2
    Polk Monitor 10B's
    Polk LSI-9's
    Polk Monitor 5's
    Polk 5 jr's
    Polk PSW-450 Sub
    Polk CSI40 Center

    Do not one day come to die, and discover you have not lived.
    This is pretty f***ed up right here.
  • avelanchefan
    avelanchefan Posts: 2,401
    edited January 2003
    Wangtango
    Very good pick. A lot of musical depth in DT's Awake. Personally the first cd I threw on my system was Dream Theaters Scenes from a Memory.

    Scottvamp
    Can you recommend any songs or CD's from that group(Theater of Tragedy). I have never heard of them. Are they progressive rock? Always looking for new groups out of the main stream.

    Right now I have Porcupine Tree in my cd player.
    Sean
    XboxLive--->avelanchefan
    PSN---->Floppa
    http://card.mygamercard.net/avelanchefan.png
  • shack
    shack Posts: 11,154
    edited January 2003
    Steeley Dan - Can't Buy A Thrill - Many demos with this one.
    "Just because you’re offended doesn’t mean you’re right." - Ricky Gervais

    "For those who believe, no proof is necessary. For those who don't believe, no proof is possible." - Stuart Chase

    "Consistency requires you to be as ignorant today as you were a year ago." - Bernard Berenson
  • Billm57
    Billm57 Posts: 689
    edited January 2003
    Originally posted by avelanchefan
    Wangtango
    Very good pick. A lot of musical depth in DT's Awake. Personally the first cd I threw on my system was Dream Theaters Scenes from a Memory.

    Scottvamp
    Can you recommend any songs or CD's from that group(Theater of Tragedy). I have never heard of them. Are they progressive rock? Always looking for new groups out of the main stream.

    Right now I have Porcupine Tree in my cd player.

    Anything by Porcupine Tree is good
  • Ceruleance
    Ceruleance Posts: 991
    edited January 2003
    Maybe none of you are into some of the newer stuff coming out, but does anyone have the deftones album "White Pony" ? Anytime I check out equipment I usually bring it with me. Something about it makes it stand out as the best produced/engineered/mastered recordings I own. All the bass is tighter and everything sounds cleaner than other stuff I own, Anyone familiar with this disc and know what I am talking about?
  • Shizelbs
    Shizelbs Posts: 7,433
    edited January 2003
    Yeah, I have heard White Pony, its just not good enough to be with their other one, the name of which eludes me right now. I own it, I should know its name!
  • Tour2ma
    Tour2ma Posts: 10,177
    edited January 2003
    Laugh if you want, but Michael Jackson's "Bad" remains one of the best digital recordings I've ever heard.

    George and other Fellow Baby-Boomers,
    Want to cry for your lost youth, try listening to any Dave Clark Five album. Not just talking poor recording or "Sears-Robuck record-player" deteriorated vinyl here, they just suck... off-key and everything. And to think that once upon a time I defended them vs. The Beatles.
    More later,
    Tour...
    Vox Copuli
    Better to remain silent and be thought a fool, than to open your mouth and remove all doubt. - Old English Proverb

    "Death doesn't come with a Uhaul." - Dennis Gardner

    "It's easy to get lost in price vs performance vs ego vs illusion." - doro
    "There is a certain entertainment value in ripping the occaisonal (sic) buttmunch..." - TroyD
  • Demiurge
    Demiurge Posts: 10,874
    edited January 2006
    Shizelbs wrote:
    Yeah, I have heard White Pony, its just not good enough to be with their other one, the name of which eludes me right now. I own it, I should know its name!

    Adrenaline? Around the Fur?

    Bump for good measure.

    (sorry, been listening to both those CDs today, agression!)
  • Shizelbs
    Shizelbs Posts: 7,433
    edited January 2006
    I was thinking Adrenaline at the time, but Around the Fur is pretty damned good too.
  • Demiurge
    Demiurge Posts: 10,874
    edited January 2006
    Their latest CD of covers and B-sides is well worth owning. Quality is top notch.
  • heiney9
    heiney9 Posts: 25,203
    edited January 2006
    I often wondered about this. While growing up, I had many systems that were certainly NOT state of the art. Lot's of musical pleasure, but ultimately revealing? No. Soooo...

    Is the "sound" I have been chasing after accurate, or just the sound I became so accustomed to over time that it became my reference?

    Example: My favorite ALBUM, is "Hot Rats" by Zappa. When the cd was made available, I was listening to MUCH better equipment than I had been listening to the VINYL version on. I was really disappointed. Where was the bass? Where did the little percussive fills that he was SO famous for go?

    Anybody see where I'm going (other than crazy)? I'm referring to Wes' post, not the other posts which are valid. It's the way Wes said, "I know when and how it sounds right".

    George Grand (of the Jersey Grand's)


    You hit the nail on the head GG. Through out my audio journey I've had favorite recordings. It seems as I moved up the audio chain, several of those selections left me wondering "what the hell". It's a strange phenomenon and now that I've solidified my current rig I have my faves. Remains to be seen when I upgrade again, if my current faves will be replaced once again. There are a few stellar recordings that made it through all these years. On the flip side, I have discovered recordings that in the past I thought were merely average, to be exceptional. So it works both ways for me.

    H9
    "Appreciation of audio is a completely subjective human experience. Measurements can provide a measure of insight, but are no substitute for human judgment. Why are we looking to reduce a subjective experience to objective criteria anyway? The subtleties of music and audio reproduction are for those who appreciate it. Differentiation by numbers is for those who do not".--Nelson Pass Pass Labs XA25 | EE Avant Pre | EE Mini Max Supreme DAC | MIT Shotgun S1 | Pangea AC14SE MKII | Legend L600 | BlueSound Node 3 - Tubes add soul!
  • thehaens@cox.net
    thehaens@cox.net Posts: 1,012
    edited January 2006
    Pink Floyd DSOTM
    John

    Ditto - DSOTM...........

    Scott
  • heiney9
    heiney9 Posts: 25,203
    edited January 2006
    Tour2ma wrote:
    Old thread, no one will ever see it, but WTH, I love this kind of stuff:

    $hit....I gotta start paying attention to the dates. I just responded to GG like it was yesterday. Not that the response is bad....just feel like dumba$$ now thinking this was current thread. Oh well, still interesting.

    FWIW, DSOTM has never impressed me as being all that great of a recording, that's just me.

    H9
    "Appreciation of audio is a completely subjective human experience. Measurements can provide a measure of insight, but are no substitute for human judgment. Why are we looking to reduce a subjective experience to objective criteria anyway? The subtleties of music and audio reproduction are for those who appreciate it. Differentiation by numbers is for those who do not".--Nelson Pass Pass Labs XA25 | EE Avant Pre | EE Mini Max Supreme DAC | MIT Shotgun S1 | Pangea AC14SE MKII | Legend L600 | BlueSound Node 3 - Tubes add soul!
  • thehaens@cox.net
    thehaens@cox.net Posts: 1,012
    edited January 2006
    Damn..........blame Demiurge