AnalogPlanet’s 2021 Holiday Gift Guide! Page 2

Book: Audio Research: Making The Music Glow by Ken Kessler ($150)

Noted audio journalist Ken Kessler’s in-detail 50-year history of Audio Research, sumptuously produced in an LP jacket sized book, is filled with archival product and other photos from the Audio Research library plus new images beautifully presented by designer Henry Nolan. This is the perfect gift for the Audio Research fanatic in your life or among your friends.—MF

Book: William S. Burroughs and the Cult of Rock ‘n’ Roll by Casey Rae ($19)

Exactly how much did Beat writer William S. Burroughs impact rock’s development and advancement? A lot, as writer, professor, and SiriusXM music licensing director Casey Rae explains in William S. Burroughs and the Cult of Rock ‘n’ Roll, an extensively researched and deeply informative book documenting Burroughs’ encounters with and influence on David Bowie, Bob Dylan, Kurt Cobain, and many other rock legends. It’s a fascinating read whose every page reveals yet another usually unthought-of connection.—ML

Book: How Music Works by David Byrne ($24)

In the history-rich, nearly 400-page How Music Works, David Byrne tracks music’s development through listening trends, technology, performance tactics, venue design, and socioeconomic changes. Whether or not your giftee cares for modern music structures, Byrne (who of course includes anecdotes from his own musical experience) lays out the map for how and why music evolved into its current forms.—ML

LP or CD box set: John Lennon - Plastic Ono Band (prices vary)

“The dream is over,” John Lennon sang on his raw, image-rejecting 1970 solo debut Plastic Ono Band’s penultimate track, “God.” Apple/UMe’s 2LP “Ultimate Mixes” or 6CD/2BD “Ultimate Collection” remixed reissues explore the deepest recesses of Lennon’s pivotal and most consequential album. As our Michael Fremer wrote, “Fifty years later, Plastic Ono Band still packs a powerful gut punch. For oldsters who lifted the stylus and got no further than ‘Mother, you had me, but I never had you’ or who made it through to ‘God,’ the final kiss-off where Lennon tells fans to grow up and get a life and then put the album back on the shelf or sold it, now’s the time to listen again to hear how right Lennon was and how wrong and selfish most fans were.”—ML

LPs: Kenny Burrell’s Midnight Blue, Herbie Hancock’s Maiden Voyage, and Eric Dolphy’s Out To Lunch (about $20-26 each)

Following the affordable, all-analog Blue Note 80 vinyl series’ success, the legendary label rolled out the identically-produced Classics line. Anyone from the jazz novice to the longtime audiophile in your life will bask in the transparent, audiophile quality of these new reissues, specifically the “introduction trifecta” (in this order) of Kenny Burrell’s Midnight Blue, Herbie Hancock’s Maiden Voyage, and Eric Dolphy’s Out To Lunch.—ML

LP: Various Artists - Somewhere Between: Mutant Pop, Electronic Minimalism & Shadow Sounds of Japan 1980-1988 ($32-35)

Earlier this year, Light In The Attic released Somewhere Between, a 45rpm 2LP compilation of 1980s “mutant pop, electronic minimalism, and shadow sounds of Japan.” These selections, existing at city pop and environmental ambient’s meeting point, are memorably melodic yet ethereal and odd. This well-curated set, which for some could reveal a previously unexplored musical universe, also includes liner notes providing crucial context.—ML

LP: Dean Blunt - BLACK METAL 2 ($20-25)

One of his most concise and accessible works, enigmatic London avant-pop icon Dean Blunt’s somewhat abstract yet beautiful BLACK METAL 2 is one of 2021’s best albums. The well-pressed 180g black vinyl disc in all-black packaging even includes an unadvertised bonus track; your gift recipient might at the very least find it an interesting selection to generate intelligent conversation.—ML

LPs: Spiritualized - The Spaceman Reissue Program (costs vary, typically $30 per 2LP album)

This year, Fat Possum reissued Spiritualized’s first four albums (Lazer Guided Melodies, Pure Phase, Ladies & Gentlemen…, and Let It Come Down), cut from the original masters in double LP editions supervised by J Spaceman. I wrote of the $30 half-speed mastered 45rpm LGM, “The sound quality is exquisite; the mastering is tonally well-balanced (though a bit lacking in the low bass range), and the imaging is immersive with precise solidity. Loud sections have plenty of instrument separation, the drums have satisfying depth, and the guitars have appropriate bite. This audiophile-grade reissue is essential for any large, well-rounded record collection.”—ML

(Malachi Lui is an AnalogPlanet contributing editor, music obsessive, avid record collector, and art enthusiast. Follow Malachi on Twitter and Instagram. Michael Fremer is the editor of AnalogPlanet, senior contributing editor for Stereophile, hi-fi expert, and highly experienced record collector. Follow him on Twitter and Instagram.)

ARTICLE CONTENTS

COMMENTS
Anton D's picture

That was that was, as Malachi mentioned in his Spiritualized review, exquisite!

Great list.

I am compelled to add...

1) The best record brush I have ever used....only 52 bucks!

https://www.ursa-major.eu/shop-us

2) Bonny Light Horseman is the best turn out the lights and fade into you album of the past several years. (It's acoustic and great for lying in bed in the dark and simply enjoying. File Under easy Listening.

https://www.bonnylighthorseman.com/

3) Edward O'Brien's (EOB) LP "Earth" is solidly great and can also be quite trance inducing. It also comes in four, count 'em, four colors!

https://www.amazon.com/Earth-EOB/dp/B084DG7DHF

4) If the audiophile in your life is interested in some fine vintage hardware...

A) Empire turntable are going to be the next Thorens 124. Only 200-400 bucks 2-3 years ago, now around a grand for nice ones, but stinking beautiful to behold, they are 'tinkerable,' and nicely done. Did I mention how pretty?

B) This one is top secret: Find a Technics SP10 Mk II and then have it modified by Krebs!

http://www.krebsupgrade.com/

Krebs, IIRC, is the drive guru behind that Oswald Mills Oma turntable that we can't afford. This is the middle class person's way to enter that level of the atmosphere. (Doing this now may actually yield a return on investment, as well. Once word gets around about the Oma table and the SP 10 Mk II motor...to the moon!)

4) The Feickert Next Generation Universal Protractor is 250 bucks and is a fantastic and sharable tool!

https://www.musicdirect.com/analog-accessories/feickert-next-generation-...

5) Treat yourself to almost any Audio Technica cartridge and be prepared to be pleased. Seriously, pick your budget point and just go for it. Almost ever model in the long lineup has advocates for its greatness. Again: pick any model and get great bang for your buck, top to bottom.

https://www.audio-technica.com/en-us/cartridges/best-for/audiophile

6) Simply stroll into Amazon and search for "Turntable Weight." save yourself hundreds of dollars! Buy an array and have a club meeting to compare! The Femeli line is lovely. The Nobsound could be made by Oracle! really, under 30-40 bucks and you have great stocking stuffers!

https://www.amazon.com/s?k=turntable+weights&ref=nb_sb_noss_1

7) Humminguru's ultrasonic record cleaner is a blast to use and CHEAP!

I have one, I got one for my son, and several of my local Hi Fi Club's members have them....easy to use, about 350 bucks.

I also have a Nitty Gritty Mini Pro and the Audiodesk and this Humminguru is a worthy companion for loads less dinero! This product is almost transcendent for the price. We stood around at our annual Chico Hi Fi Club bonfire and 'steak sans utensils' last night and sang its praises. Please check it out.

https://humminguru.com/

MalachiLui's picture

thanks for the recommendations! definitely makes a good addition to the (already long!) list! good suggestions there (though for the record, i long ago sold off my US pressing copy of EOB's 'earth'...)

Anton D's picture

If you had been the proper age when "Earth" was released, you'd be able to recognize its proper place in the pantheon of stars.

Carn sarn you young people not lining up and getting in step with us old guys!

I'm gonna go yell at a cloud, now.

Peace, out. Happiest of holidays to this great site.

:-D

Glotz's picture

EOB Earth was fun! And you are one of my favorite rays of sunshine!

Happy holidays to everyone and God bless every last one of you.

Glotz's picture

But mine sheds all over the friggin place. Great effective brush tho... 14 rows of merciless cleaning!

Mendo's picture

I agree that Empire table's prices are on the go. However, having owned one in college I have to say that the tonearm had massive slop in it. It still sounded pretty good, but that was a real turn off. Several others I have seen were the same.

mraudioguru's picture

...inner sleeves. I've tried almost all of them.

https://www.sleevecityusa.com/diskeeper-ultimate-audiophile-inner-sleeve...

I'm quite interested in that Humminguru RCM.

vinyl listener's picture

It does a fair job but is best used in conjunction with a good manual pre-scrub before you use the Guru. It appears most buyers are noobs who have never cleaned a record before so are wowed by the Guru's rundimentary performance. For more info checkout the videos on Youtube by The Vinyl Attack !

RH's picture

Michael, I was REALLY looking forward to that record brush comparison that got sidetracked by...whatever all that lacquer hullabaloo was all about.

Will you be doing the record brush comparisons any time soon?

Michael Fremer's picture
It's coming up soon. Right now I'm out of the country....back Wednesday...so hopefully by the weekend...
miguelito's picture

Hi Michael. You’ve done a great deal of fabulous record cleaning methods/machines reviews. However, I am unclear as to what is your preferred method, both for new records and old and/or old and grimy. For example, do you use the Audio Desk with it’s fluid? No fluid? If using the Kirmuss method, do you put alcohol in the bath? All these details matter and I would love to see a writeup or video with your very own recommendations. Thank you for the great work!

RH's picture

Great, thanks Michael. I'll keep an eye out for it.

Anton D's picture
Anton D's picture

I am fiscally decimated by the current world.

I'd have paid 3 grand.

Same seems to happen with Hi Fi, maybe double decimated.

350,000 dollar records players, I wouldn't even strech to 1/10th that price. 3,500? yes.

750,000 dollar speakers? Would I go 75,000 for them? No. 7,500, if my wife OK'd it, I'd bite.

I'm not just off by half, I am off by two log factors!

JA2 has seen modern rock pass him by. The same has happened to modern Hi Fi, for me.

rich d's picture

I can't hope to compete with Anton D's comprehensive approach, and I've finally found a Brian Eno release that I won't (OK, can't) buy. What I can do, though, is point out that you've missed the one accessory which goes with nearly every kind of music and is compatible with a broad range of equipment: a bottle of Scotch. It's very much in the spirit (sorry) of the season. Lagavulin for me if anyone's feeling generous.

cundare's picture

You left out the most important accessory that any vinyl afficionado should own: A complete set of WAM Engineering's WallyTools (as well as WAM's microscopic cartridge evaluation / hardware-alignment-error-mitigation service). I know of no way to more effectively improve the sound of your rig for three figures.

bagamo6120's picture

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