Sangre wrote:
I strongly dislike modern production and I hate remastered albums. It's incredibly rare that I can find an album released in recent years that has impressed me production-wise, it's all been negative as far as I'm concerned.
When I go through my album collection, I would say right around the mid 90s is when everything went sour. Plastic sounding drums and overkill amounts of compression is enough to really turn me off from modern music.
A lot of albums that are considered to have "weak" production I feel actually have strong production. I'm not talking about when black metal bands purposely sabotage the production, but I love hearing a nice organic production that is dynamic and lively, in which instruments stand out on their own rather than having everything super compressed sounding glued together in a wall of sound.
I've got bad news for everyone:
Tape compresses sound, Vinyl compresses sound, tubes compress sound. Anything analog does it basically other than solid state for the most part.
Your Outer, Middle and Inner ear compress sound.
Speakers compress sound, except it is called dampening in that context
It takes a shitload of compression to make a track even useful.
Not compressing sound in the mastering state loses a ton of headroom, introduces noise and causes bit-depth loss.
You can probably figure out that they are trying to take mixes that were meant to be heavily compressed naturally and using pro-tools to do it instead. The fact is on an older album you have to live with tape hiss and overall lean audio quality. This would not even be the case if people still purchased quality audio equipment. A valve pre-amp set to "saturation" will boost all the lows, compress them and add the low-harmonic distortion everyone got used to and was compensated for when those albums came out on their original medium.
Newer albums sound far better than anything ever recorded if they were done with quality in mind, which most metal albums are. What kind of "qualities" the sound has and were chosen is another issue.