The Magic of Mono
In the audio world, one of the complaints I hear is that people dislike MONO and much prefer STEREO. I have never understood why. One quick example I always use is Pet Sounds by the Beach Boys. The new remaster is in pristine STEREO but the original mix (and the one Steve Hoffman used) is MONO. A quick comparison and you'll see that the MONO beats out the STEREO.
Another example is The Beatles. The MONO mixes have a special magic - a special punch you can hear. The vocals are more realistic and the music sounds more immediate.
The nay-sayers will point out that these are "special" exceptions to the rules.
Well - yesterday I got this old, old vinyl LP which I got from ebay. I quickly cleaned it and gave it a spin. This isn't the Beatles or even someone famous. Rather it is an old folk LP featuring a singing trio. Despite being in MONO the music and vocals just sounded fantastic! I'm guessing this LP is from the mid 1960's and it sounds great. While it may not be "Hi-Fi" in modern day terms, the sound is just magical. There is depth, warmth, separation and yes - there is soundstage.


So why do I write this? Well - don't discard a recording just for being MONO. Keep in mind that STEREO or multi-channel isn't the end all and be all of music. Pick up a MONO Gray Label pressing of Sinatra or a MONO Bob Dylan and you'll see that there is a special magic within those MONO grooves!

Comments
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Posted 02-03-2008 at 01:12 AM by derekbmn
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I agree...the best way to listen to any passage of music is, I feel, the way that the artist wanted us to.
I have several Mono and re-mastered to stereo albums and to my ears the Mono versions sound better.
I believe there are cartridges that are best suited to Mono recording.Posted 02-11-2008 at 04:38 PM by 883dave
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Posted 04-04-2008 at 11:23 PM by bjarnetv












