On the Japanese "Best of the Supremes", I don't remember which song, but one song uses the wrong vocal where Diana makes a mistake and stops singing. How that got released has no explanation.
On the Japanese "Best of the Supremes", I don't remember which song, but one song uses the wrong vocal where Diana makes a mistake and stops singing. How that got released has no explanation.
On the Japanese "Best of the Supremes", I don't remember which song, but one song uses the wrong vocal where Diana makes a mistake and stops singing. How that got released has no explanation.
Right! Of all the 5.1 songs I've ever heard that's the one that stands out the most as differing from the original. When I first heard it 5 or 6 or whatever years ago I thought hey that's cool they added a middle section.Did anyone mention the addition of marching snare and guitar solo to "Never Going Back Again" from Rumours?
And, of course, Sly's Greatest was mixed for Quad from multitrack masters. The prior stereo release was electronically rechanneled. Even if you are only capable of reproducing stereo LP's, the Quad album is the one to own.
And to compensate, there's a vocal bit ("¡Sabor!") missing in "Oye como va". It can faintly be heard.Santana - Black Magic Woman/Gypsy Queen. There are shouts/cheers in the quad mix that are absent from the stereo version.
Jethro Tull - Aqualung - "Sun streaking cold" part does not have the "megaphone" sound.
Nilsson - Schmilsson - "Driving Along" has a different guitar solo mix
On the Japanese "Best of the Supremes", I don't remember which song, but one song uses the wrong vocal where Diana makes a mistake and stops singing. How that got released has no explanation.
EAQ31584 Edgar Winter Group - They Only Come Out At Night
Probably one of the most popular quad albums ever released contains a timing difference during 'Frankenstein' in terms of the entrance of the ARP synthesizer sequence. The quad version starts several seconds before the stereo version.
TRIVIA: Excerpts of Frankenstein have been heard as early as his debut album Entrance in 1970. Great album, highly recommended.
Santana "Evil Ways" - cold ending
Paul Simon "Kodachrome" - more prominent organ and electric guitar parts in rear channels
Beatles "I Want You (She's So Heavy) - Billy Preston's organ brought up much higher in the mix (particularly the solos during the chorus)
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