Quad version of Pink Floyd Meddle

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I'm thinking it's easy to say that because what else can it be. But upmix from stereo does it give you true 5.1 because I'm experiencing true 5.1 in the song echoes. Anyways who ever did this up did a amazing job..

If it's the entire album, it's an upmix. Otherwise it might be the Pompeii soundtrack. Either way, it is not an actual surround mix of the Meddle album.

That doesn't mean it's bad. Some upmixes sound very good...as do some DPLIIx on-the-fly upmixes.
 
I ran my old Meddle CD through spec and it pulled out a great surround mix. It was the first album I tried and still one of my favorites of the ones I've upmixed. Echoes really does come alive in surround. Chances are that the surround master should do well with it.
 
Just to throw a little gasoline on this old fire:

http://www.pinkfloydonline.com/faq/question37/

17 October 1971 — A quad mix album of “Echoes” is played for press at the Roundhouse, but the quad mix is never released.

End of quote from the link. The Shine On box set quotes dates for mixing in quad, and I suspect this track at least was the result of those sessions. The dates are quoted earlier in this thread.

I met James Guthrie at the Rocky Mountain Audio Fest in 2011 and gave him this information. I asked if he would be in a position to look for the mix, and he said he was in a position to do so. Whether he has ever made such an attempt I am unable to say. If anyone else comes across him personally, I suggest reinforcing the request. If an immersion box ever comes out for Meddle, this would be an obvious bonus track.
 
Upmix music i find is just a waste of time can't understand if someone has a 5.1 system why would they listen to what i call crap....
 
Upmix music i find is just a waste of time can't understand if someone has a 5.1 system why would they listen to what i call crap....

To me an upmix is kinda like a movie based on a true story. Whether I enjoy it or not, I always wonder what it would have been like if everything were true and accurate.

Keep in mind that the mix I refer to above is an official quad mix from the original multitrack masters which was documented to have been created and presented in the fall of 1971. Therefore, this is indeed a grail of surround sound listening (certainly for me). What seems less clear is whether the entire album was mixed at that time, or just Echoes.
 
Upmix music i find is just a waste of time can't understand if someone has a 5.1 system why would they listen to what i call crap....


Sometimes I prefer the 'upmix' that plain old DPL II Music on my AVR creates from an old 2-channel mix, to the actual 5.1 remix of the same recording. And some fan-made upmixes are quite spectacular (PF's 'Animals' comes to mind).
 
Upmix music i find is just a waste of time can't understand if someone has a 5.1 system why would they listen to what i call crap....

Obviously, because it may not be crap. Hell, I've heard lousy upmixes, but some very fine work, too, so I don't tend to throw out the baby with the bathwater.

As for a quad MEDDLE, if the whole album had been done, there was no reason not to issue it. Although not as popular in 1972 as they would be after DSOTM, by '73 or '74 their audience was large enough that even non-quaddies would have checked it out just because it was PF. Pity we didn't get it, woulda been a killer.

ED :)
 
To each his own I suppose, but that remark is a generalization only.

I literally have hundreds of upmixes and the results do vary. (yet to still get to a lot of them - it was drinking from a firehose there for a while) Results will depend on 1) original source material, 2) tools / method employed and 3) mixer skill, taste and expectations. Given that, generalizations simply don't work.
 
Obviously, because it may not be crap. Hell, I've heard lousy upmixes, but some very fine work, too, so I don't tend to throw out the baby with the bathwater.

As for a quad MEDDLE, if the whole album had been done, there was no reason not to issue it. Although not as popular in 1972 as they would be after DSOTM, by '73 or '74 their audience was large enough that even non-quaddies would have checked it out just because it was PF. Pity we didn't get it, woulda been a killer.

It's always seemed odd to me that "Atom Heart Mother" got the quad treatment but "Meddle" didn't. I love AHM, but I assume it wasn't as popular (and didn't have as many discrete tracks to work with) as the follow-up.
 
It's always seemed odd to me that "Atom Heart Mother" got the quad treatment but "Meddle" didn't. I love AHM, but I assume it wasn't as popular (and didn't have as many discrete tracks to work with) as the follow-up.

Actually, in the UK, Atom Heart Mother was the Floyd's first #1 album so it was popular there at the time. (Oddly enough, Meddle, Dark Side and The Wall never got to #1 in the UK.) The fact that it had been a #1 probably played into the decision to mix it into quad.
 
FWIWW

Back when the two Immersion Quads of DSOTM & WYWH were released, UNCUT MAG reported that in addition to these two quads, Floyds Meddle was mixed and released.Not true of course.They were most likely referring to Atom Heart Mom.
 
FWIWW

Back when the two Immersion Quads of DSOTM & WYWH were released, UNCUT MAG reported that in addition to these two quads, Floyds Meddle was mixed and released.Not true of course.They were most likely referring to Atom Heart Mom.

They made a quad mix for Meddle. You can read about them playing it at an album release party but there was never a commercial release.
I suspect they were in fact talking about the bluray release of Meddle ahead of AHM at the time. Meddle and Animals were surely going to be the next releases before they pulled the plug on the HD remaster project. Stuff's all in the can though (as evidenced by the CD reductions made from the stereo mixes that they DID put up for sale). They're hoarding the rest of the HD album masters at present.

The EMI UK Q8's are discrete mixes. If Meddle had a quad release, I'm sure that would have been a discrete mix in the UK too.

A_L
Yep. Your AHM Q8 is still sounding might fine to me too! :)
Considering the abundance of very low levels in places on this very dynamic, classical music style production, the fidelity is actually surprisingly high on this tape.

You can have somewhat the real thing with the Quad soundtrack of Pompeii, which someone capable surely has merged with the movie.
Somewhat? This one is absolutely the real thing (if I do say so myself :D)! It's not too often in life that a holy grail such as this gets uncovered and in such good quality too!

Upmix music i find is just a waste of time can't understand if someone has a 5.1 system why would they listen to what i call crap....

Agreed. Ultimately it takes you further away from the original sound. There might be some argument that mastering a stereo source into a 5.1 format could benefit on a smaller speaker system. But if you have a 'full size' stereo setup, you'll have better seats with the original stereo program vs. processing said stereo program into 5 channels. Especially if you're doing phase tricks to generate movement between speakers that was never actually intentionally mixed that way.

Hate to rain on anyone's parade with that. But if you're looking for the "best seats" to hear a recording - it's the most original master with the cleanest preservation. And sometimes you need a playback system with real life dynamics ability to play back some of these recordings - vs. the 'slammed right into your face' pop productions where you can hear the CD loud before you even remove it from the case.

Even the Steve Wilson upmixes (for the productions where the original multitracks were lost or didn't exist for some of the songs) sound like a generation loss compared to the original stereo flat transfer they were made from. They do in fact come across a little bigger on a small surround system vs a small stereo system, but the original stereo wins hands down on a full system. (That stereo board tape of the live "Clap" from The Yes Album comes to mind as an example.)
 
Actually, in the UK, Atom Heart Mother was the Floyd's first #1 album so it was popular there at the time. (Oddly enough, Meddle, Dark Side and The Wall never got to #1 in the UK.) The fact that it had been a #1 probably played into the decision to mix it into quad.

There was probably a time when I knew that, but I've since forgotten. Thanks for the reminder!
 
Agreed. Ultimately it takes you further away from the original sound. There might be some argument that mastering a stereo source into a 5.1 format could benefit on a smaller speaker system. But if you have a 'full size' stereo setup, you'll have better seats with the original stereo program vs. processing said stereo program into 5 channels. Especially if you're doing phase tricks to generate movement between speakers that was never actually intentionally mixed that way.

Hate to rain on anyone's parade with that. But if you're looking for the "best seats" to hear a recording - it's the most original master with the cleanest preservation. And sometimes you need a playback system with real life dynamics ability to play back some of these recordings - vs. the 'slammed right into your face' pop productions where you can hear the CD loud before you even remove it from the case.

Even the Steve Wilson upmixes (for the productions where the original multitracks were lost or didn't exist for some of the songs) sound like a generation loss compared to the original stereo flat transfer they were made from. They do in fact come across a little bigger on a small surround system vs a small stereo system, but the original stereo wins hands down on a full system. (That stereo board tape of the live "Clap" from The Yes Album comes to mind as an example.)


It's really a matter of preference. And settings, I suppose. Certain to me, in most cases DPL II upmixed stereo tends to sound better -- more 'real', more engaging -- than stereo. It's actually more like nearfield stereo, in the degree of imaging and depth it achieves (and the occasional 'surround' motion is a bonus). And the imaging is rock-solid. (FWIW, my 5 speakers are all the same, a model with good on/off axis response, and I also use Audyssey MultiXT 32 'room correction'. In my setup the speakers 'disappear', as they should in any good configuration, 2 channel or more)

2 channel has always been a highly compromised delivery format, but a wonder for what it is. However, as for 'taking you further away from the origianl sound' -- if by taht you mean, the original sound of the 2-channel *recording*, not the live event (if there was one) -- certainly an DPLII type upmix is closer to that, than a brand new 5.1 remix, which tend to come compelte with re-EQ, digital reverb, etc....no?
 
Hi,
I found an image of a quad Meddle version, but can't find anything with the given number.
CU, Tom

pfm0sfqyq.jpg
 
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