There is actually a weird surround remix of songs from their 1st 3 albums out there. A DVDA called Gold from the David Byron Era. Have you ever heard people try to remix those Rock Band and Guitar Hero stems? And how they usually turn out extra terrible between the stems being mutilated to begin with and then amateur mixes on top of that? That's what this DVDA sounds like. Nothing but extreme disappointment. I think it's an official-ish release but it sounds like a bad bootleg.
I think it's because some of the versions used were from different takes. The mixing is from the Mike Oldfield school, like you have not heard the original mix and its the 1st time you have heard the song, rather than the Steven Wilson school of immersion in the original and recreate then expand.Oh man, this is the best description of this I've seen. I know those early Heep albums like the back of my hand, and that DVDA isn't merely "not great", it's so strange what they did (and the results), that it's a downright CONFUSING listen. Listening to it is like...
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good album that.They could have included the have included the Gold From the Byron Era DVD contents some interesting variations on the original album versions that is on the whole genuine 5.1descrete mixes
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