This was the first rock quad LP to make it to the stores in the US.
"Music" was released in December, 1971. It definitely was an early quad issue, but I can't confirm either way whether it was the first quad rock LP to be released.
This was the first rock quad LP to make it to the stores in the US.
All of this talk about "Music" led me to check it out this weekend. I dragged the Japan QS LP and the US QS LP up to the "big computer" and played the song "Song of Long Ago" into the PC through the Surround Master, once from each LP.
Looking at the audio which I recorded from the Surround Master quad outputs into my MOTU and into Vegas 12 at 24/96, you can visually see that the Japanese LP was mastered louder, not brickwall loud, just volume loud. The wave forms from the Japanese LP were of a higher amplitude and I adjusted nothing from one LP to another.
As for the mix, well, it's not that "discrete". Listening to both versions they pretty much sound the same. If I isolate the two rights, I clearly hear the James Taylor harmony vocals, and in the lefts is Carole's vocals without James. But she is in all of the channels as well. James is not.
As for using the included "layout map" it's not quite as pinpoint as that layout shows. It's an early quad mix and compared to a Columbia Q8 it's what I would call "Bigger Stereo" than four-point quad.
I would almost be tempted to turn the mix 90 degrees clockwise, putting James in the rears and Carole in the fronts. Maybe I'll give that a shot some day.
Still, this album has some great tunes and is worthy of your quad collection. But realistically, I really don't hear what Karen and Richard Carpenter heard when they formed their comments that they put in one of their quad LPs where they noted that they "heard the Carole King album in quad and were blown away".
This album will not blow anyone away with respect to surround sound. IMHO
According to the diagram on the inner sleeve for the album, Carole was placed dead center, not center front. While I agree with you that this is not a four-point, "discrete" mix, it's quite effective.
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