So I bought Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band and Abbey Road at Starbucks, lol. Anyway they both sound incredible. I think "With a Little Help from My Friends" is the best sounding track on either. I always thought it was a cool tune but this time it blew me away. Ringo was gold here. "Being for the Benefit of Mr. Kite!" and "When I'm Sixty-Four" were great also. I can't put into words how good these sound now. Buy it!
Pretty cool stuff here imo.
http://blogcritics.org/tag/the-beatles-remasters/
bookmarked...i can vouch for uruk-hai's contention that ac/dc & p-funk were ear-splittingly loud in concert (especially the cannon shots!)...
i'll echo the props to saintsfan... i checked this thread out AFTER buying some of the remasters, but the combination of being passionate & well informed is powerful... you make a hyperbole-lite, articulate, eminently lucid & intelligible guide/narrator & provide a helpful road map of what is some pretty expansive turf (the entire beatles catalog)...
this has made me want to break out my DVD copy of yellow supmarine, as well as rent some movies/docs from netflix...
i already had abbey road, the white album & yellow submarine (NOT the one in the re-master series, but the film soundtrack that has songs in the movie like eleanor rigby)...
got re-master versions of those three, as well as revolver, sgt. pepper, MMT & white album...
it seems to me that in addition to the hearing damage alluded to by uruk hai (

), another possible (more common) explanation of difference of opinion in any purported enhancement of sound quality... could be attributed to variance in playing equipment?
yesterday i wanted to play the classical stuff from YS re-master... i would characterize my stereo as neither great nor terrible, probably pretty average (excepting FBGs that have B & W nautilus speakers that go for $20,000+ a pair)... i didn't have a baseline or prior recording to compare it to, but the sound leapt out of the speakers... the clarity & resolution were exemplary, and stood out, compared to other beatles recordings i have had in the past... noticed after a second play details present that i missed before (hearing the bell struck with an initial percussive sound like i was in the studio... or the musician was in my living room)... the corny-sounding cliche i heard repeatedly (such as hearing it for the first time again) sounds over-the-top, but the sound was for me a revelation, marked & pronounced...
listened to revolver next... like many others seemingly, my taste had gravitated towards latter beatles (especially abbey road, which i always thought was a masterpiece since i was first exposed to it around 30 years ago ((agree the duelling guitar solo on the end is the greatest ever)), & the white album, in a brillinatly eclectic way... no doubt reflecting the fragmented state of their partnership... really amazing they were able to forge such a work of beauty in the crucible of such trying circumstances... a testament to their individual perhaps more then their usual, typical ensemble brilliance)... i had revolver & sgt pepper before that (as well as yellow submarine sound track)... don't think i ever had MMT, & did have the red (early) & blue (latter) greatest hits double albums... latter among my first albums, got heavy play back in the day...
on the strength of so many beatles cognoscenti championing revolver as one of the best (if not THE best), gave it another spin... glad i did! eleanor rigby was always one of my favorites, vaguely remembered here there & everywhere being its all too much-like (maybe my single favorite beatles SONG... if i counted the medley at end of abbey road, that would be it... blackbird is a great song... i was reminded of how little these songs have dated, if at all)... thought it would be interesting to hear a buch of other songs i hadn't heard in a long time (some songs like got to get you into my life i had seemingly heard so many times i had them committed to memory, but i still listened to them with fresh ears)... as noted above, i like to play music for my child (miles, p-funk, bach & mozart, film composers like rosza, morricone, goldsmith, whatever)... to say these melodies are catchy is like saying everest is pretty high... it gave him a smile...
next listened to abbey road... definitely sounds better... not just superior clarity & resolution, but in the separation & distinction of the instruments within the mix... & not just the instruments, but in the harmonization of the vocals... the beatles were arguably the best ever at that (C, S & N were pretty good in their own right)... ringo's drums are more noticeable in some songs... imo, they definitely did more than just make the bass punchier...
just put on sgt. pepper... sound on first song far more pristine than i recall... even a simple, hummable, almost child-like song like get by with a little help from my friends (my favorite by ringo) contains vocal details & separation i don't recall hearing before... the bass is more prominent in songs, & that isn't a bad thing... it doesn't overpower the other instruments in the mix... can't wait to check out sound, mix & details on MMT & white album...
incidentally, some review talked about how they prefered some of the later re-masters like abbey road because they mixed down from a larger number of tracks... i think early beatles were 2 track, circa revolver-era 4 track (?) and abbey road 8 track? lee perry used to use minimal tracks when mixing down some of his dub variants (you can't back up when you layer in track after track onto the source tapes... & it gets a very dense, not necessartily unpleasant sound)... as saintsfan noted, earlier beatles may have had cases where all the instruments are in one channel, & vocals in the other... by the time they had 8 track, it was easier to separate the instruments & vocal harmonies in the mix down... not to dis the earlier stuff, but a possible partial explanation for why some can hear a bigger difference in some of the latter stuff...
maybe a metaphor for why i find the re-masters instantly identifiable as superior in sound... certain big screens (and blu-ray transfers) are better than others because of the contrast enabled by having blacker blacks (a non-obvious factor)... certain kubrick films (like the shining comes to mind for me) have a kind of hermetically sealed quality in the sound, like when danny is wheeling around the hallways of the doomed hotel... kubrick was a master of silence as well as sound, & in some sections there is NO ambient, unintended sounds... in that context it was claustrophobic (probably intended for the mood of that picture)... in a good way these re-masters have that quality of hearing the sounds pop out of a sea of silence... with less hum & buzz & unwanted distortion that i recall from before... without ALTERING the sound or making it sound compressed with sonic equivalents of DNR in the video world, which can do more harm than good & leave nasty, unwanted artifacts of the clean up process...
these re-masters reminded me the beatles don't have any bad songs... some are just better than others...
* the beatles figured prominently in outliers by malcolm gladwell (tipping point, blink)... he talks about some kind of neuromuscular law where classical musicians need to practice about 10,000 hours to become experts (it crops up in other areas like programming with bill joy & gates, who benefitted in a huge way from a similarly unusual confluence of events... having early & great access to computers, then rare, etc.)... coincidentally, the beatles unusual (for a rock band) stint in hamburg enabled them to hone their chops & music writing prowess in front of live audiences (playing for 6 hours a day sometimes?) to a far greater degree than other bands (i think they crossed the 10,000 hour threshold), & may have been their X-factor in transforming & morphing them from a promising act to the most seminal band in rock history...