The copy we are selling is similar to the one pictured above.
Sonic Grade
Side One:
Side Two:
Vinyl Grade
Side One: Mint Minus Minus
Side Two: Mint Minus Minus
- Boasting two superb Double Plus (A++) sides, you'll have a hard time finding a copy that sounds remotely as good as this black print Stereo 360 pressing
- Rich, smooth, sweet, full of ambience (maybe too much ambience), dead on correct tonality, and wonderfully breathy vocals - everything that we listen for in a great record is here
- Huge amounts of three-dimensional space and ambience, along with boatloads of Tubey Magic - here's a 30th Street recording from 1962 that demonstrates just how good Columbia's engineers were back then
- The title track became a gold-selling Top Ten hit that stayed on the charts for almost three years (!) and earned Bennett two Grammy Awards (Record of the Year and Best Solo Vocal Performance)
- To hear the real Tony Bennett, play "Once Upon a Time" - it's here and nobody sings it better
- 5 stars: "...Bennett had been searching for a ... musical approach beyond his long-gone pop work.... With this album, [he] found the key, not only by happening across a signature song in the title track, but also in the approach to songs like 'Once Upon a Time'...and Cy Coleman and Carolyn Leigh's 'The Best Is Yet to Come,' which Bennett helped make a standard."
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Vintage covers for this album are hard to find in exceptionally clean shape. Most of the will have at least some amount of ringwear, seam wear and edge wear. We guarantee that the cover we supply with this Hot Stamper is at least VG.
Having done this for so long, we understand and appreciate that rich, full, solid, Tubey Magical sound is key to the presentation of this primarily vocal music. We rate these qualities higher than others we might be listening for (e.g., bass definition, soundstage, depth, etc.). The music is not so much about the details in the recording, but rather in trying to recreate a solid, palpable, real Tony Bennett standing right in your listening room, along with the 38 other musicians from the session (although they're probably sitting). The better copies have an uncanny way of doing just that.
The space of your stereo room will seem to expand in all directions in order to accommodate them, an illusion of course, but nevertheless a remarkably convincing one.
If you exclusively play modern repressings of older recordings (this one is now over 60 years old), I can say without fear of contradiction that you have never heard this kind of sound on vinyl. Old records have it -- not often, and certainly not always -- but less than one out of 100 new records do, if our experience with the hundreds we've played can serve as a guide.
Need a refresher course in Tubey Magic after playing too many modern recordings or remasterings? This vintage Columbia 360 Stereo pressing is overflowing with it. Rich, smooth, sweet, full of ambiance, dead-on correct tonality -- everything that’s good about All Tube Vocal Recordings from the 50s and 60s is precisely what’s good about the sound of this record.
The huge studio the music was recorded in is captured faithfully here. The height, width and depth of the staging here are extraordinary. We are not big soundstage guys here at Better Records, but we can’t deny the appeal of the space to be found on a record as good as this.
This is the sound of Tubey Magic. No recordings will ever be made that sound like this again, and no CD will ever capture what is in the grooves of this record. There actually is a CD of this album but those of us with a good turntable couldn't care less.
What The Best Sides Of I Left My Heart In San Francisco Have To Offer Is Not Hard To Hear
- The biggest, most immediate staging in the largest acoustic space
- The most Tubey Magic, without which you have almost nothing. CDs give you clean and clear. Only the best vintage vinyl pressings offer the kind of Tubey Magic that was on the tapes in 1962
- Tight, note-like, rich, full-bodied bass, with the correct amount of weight down low
- Natural tonality in the midrange -- with all the instruments having the correct timbre
- Transparency and resolution, critical to hearing into the three-dimensional studio space
No doubt there's more but we hope that should do for now. Playing the record is the only way to hear all of the qualities we discuss above, and playing the best pressings against a pile of other copies under rigorously controlled conditions is the only way to find a pressing that sounds as good as this one does.
What We're Listening For On I Left My Heart In San Francisco
- Energy for starters. What could be more important than the life of the music?
- Then: presence and immediacy. The vocals aren't "back there" somewhere, lost in the mix. They're front and center where any recording engineer worth his salt would put them.
- The Big Sound comes next -- wall to wall, lots of depth, huge space, three-dimensionality, all that sort of thing.
- Then transient information -- fast, clear, sharp attacks, not the smear and thickness so common to these LPs.
- Tight note-like bass -- which ties in with good transient information, also the issue of frequency extension further down.
- Next: transparency -- the quality that allows you to hear deep into the soundfield, showing you the space and air around all the instruments.
- Extend the top and bottom and voila, you have The Real Thing -- an honest to goodness Hot Stamper.
Reissues
We played a few decent sounding reissues from the 70s that may eventually make it to the site. Again and again my notes made it clear that those pressings could have used more tubes in the chain.
On this record, like so many others you may have read about on the site, the right amount of Tubey Magic -- and by that we mean a very healthy amount -- makes all the difference.
Now keep in mind that we are talking about 1962 tubes, not the stuff that engineers are using today to make “tube-mastered” records. Modern pressings barely hint at the Tubey Magical sound of a record like this, if our experience with hundreds of them is any guide.
We, unlike far too many of today’s misguided audiophile reviewers, have a very hard time taking any of the new reissues seriously. We think the data -- the unrelenting mediocrity to be heard on these modern pressings -- are pretty clear in that regard.
If you’ve ever heard a pressing that sounds like this one you know from experience there hasn’t been a record manufactured in the last forty years that has its sound. Right, wrong or otherwise, this kind of sound is simply not part of the 21st century world we live in.
If you want to be transported back to San Francisco, or in this case New York’s famed Columbia Studios, circa 1962, you will need a vintage record like this to do it right.
Vinyl Condition
Mint Minus Minus and maybe a bit better is about as quiet as any vintage pressing will play, and since only the right vintage pressings have any hope of sounding good on this album, that will most often be the playing condition of the copies we sell. (The copies that are even a bit noisier get listed on the site are seriously reduced prices or traded back in to the local record stores we shop at.)
Those of you looking for quiet vinyl will have to settle for the sound of other pressings and Heavy Vinyl reissues, purchased elsewhere of course as we have no interest in selling records that don't have the vintage analog magic of these wonderful recordings.
If you want to make the trade-off between bad sound and quiet surfaces with whatever Heavy Vinyl pressing might be available, well, that's certainly your prerogative, but we can't imagine losing what's good about this music -- the size, the energy, the presence, the clarity, the weight -- just to hear it with less background noise.
Side One
- I Left My Heart In San Francisco
- Once Upon A Time
- Tender Is The Night
- Smile
- Love For Sale
- Taking A Chance On Love
Side Two
- Candy Kisses
- Have I Told You Lately?
- Rules Of The Road
- Marry Young
- I'm Always Chasing Rainbows
- The Best Is Yet To Come
AMG 5 Star Rave Review
Along with his producer, Ernest Altschuler, and his arranger/pianist, Ralph Sharon, Tony Bennett had been searching for a repertoire and a musical approach beyond his long-gone pop work with Mitch Miller of the early 50s and his artistically pleasing but commercially dicey jazz work of the mid- to late 50s. It seemed to be a combination of Broadway songs and other contemporary material, carefully selected and arranged to show off Bennett's now-burnished vocals, which, as he approached the end of his thirties, were starting to be located in a more comfortable range closer to a baritone than a tenor.
With this album, they found the key, not only by happening across a signature song in the title track, but also in the approach to songs like "Once Upon a Time," a gem from the flop musical All American, and Cy Coleman and Carolyn Leigh's "The Best Is Yet to Come," which Bennett helped make a standard. (Frank Sinatra didn't do it until two years later.) From here on until the world changed again toward the late 60s, Bennett would not have to feel that he had to compromise his art for popularity, making up-tempo singles in an attempt to meet the marketplace while longing to do ballads and swing material instead. I Left My Heart In San Francisco, a gold-selling Top Ten hit that stayed in the charts almost three years, demonstrated that he could have it all. (Tony Bennett won two 1962 Grammy Awards for the title song: Record of the Year and Best Solo Vocal Performance, Male.)
Behind the Scenes Recording I Left My Heart In San Francisco
The building on 30th Street was square and contained a square studio, which Columbia brought online in 1949. The former Armenian church offered a 100-foot-square recording room, with space enough for an elevated 8×14-foot control room, with the custom console made by Columbia’s technical maintenance team; it was an 8-channel affair that had been expanded to 12 by 1962, to accommodate the Scully 8-track recorder Laico was working on.
The room’s natural resonance was moderated by drapes on the walls that reached toward the soaring ceiling. It was certainly big enough for the 38-piece orchestra that was tuning up at 10 p.m. that night when Bennett’s session was scheduled to start, with Laico engineering and Miller producing. “That’s when the musicians were available,” says Laico. “You wanted them late at night, when they were at their best. We usually got four tunes out of every session, they were so good.”The Whole Story
In 1962, Frank Laico was already 44, a veteran of the old regime at Columbia Records, an engineer at the label’s studios at 799 Seventh Ave. since July, 1946; he later moved to the new studios at 49 East 52nd St., originally the CBS radio network building. But Laico preferred working at Columbia’s studios on East 30th Street, just off Third Avenue. Away from the centralized office and studio combination that Columbia’s “Black Rock” building was intended to be, it was such a magical room that Laico basically left his heart there, too. “The day they knocked that studio down, in 1982, was the saddest day of my life,” the 82-year-old Laico recalls somberly. “That was the day I decided to get out of Columbia.”
Mitch Miller liked 30th Street, too; Laico remembers that Miller issued a fiat that nothing about the building was to be changed — that included not scraping the grimy hardwood floors, lest it scrape away the aural magic, as well. “Don’t even paint it, he told them.” Laico says. “But sure enough, a month after Mitch resigned years later, they were in there cleaning it up.”
The building on 30th Street was square and contained a square studio, which Columbia brought online in 1949. The former Armenian church offered a 100-foot-square recording room, with space enough for an elevated 8×14-foot control room, with the custom console made by Columbia’s technical maintenance team; it was an 8-channel affair that had been expanded to 12 by 1962, to accommodate the Scully 8-track recorder Laico was working on. The room’s natural resonance was moderated by drapes on the walls that reached toward the soaring ceiling. It was certainly big enough for the 38-piece orchestra that was tuning up at 10 p.m. that night when Bennett’s session was scheduled to start, with Laico engineering and Miller producing. “That’s when the musicians were available,” says Laico. “You wanted them late at night, when they were at their best. We usually got four tunes out of every session, they were so good.”
“I Left My Heart in San Francisco” had excited Miller, who thought it would be a hit for Bennett. According to Laico and Mike Figlio, another Columbia engineer who mixed the track, Bennett was less than thrilled with the song, so it was left till the end of the session. Laico had set up what was a pretty standard microphone configuration for the time. He preferred to give each component of the orchestra its own microphone and track, vs. the classical approach of blending overhead mics above the entire orchestra. Thus, the strings, the horns and the woodwinds on the record each had their own track, as did the rhythm section of bass, drums and piano. “No one was worried about isolation or any of that horseshit back then,” says Laico. “The only isolation I went for was a baffle around Tony as he sang, and it was low enough that he could see the conductor.”
Laico recorded Bennett’s vocals with a Neumann U49, the result of a series of experiments over the years to find the right mic for the singer. “When Mitch and I worked on a new singer, we’d usually spend the first session just developing a sound for them, including which microphone, as well as EQ settings and echo,” he explains. “Once we got that, it went into my log book, and Mitch always said not to change anything. Same thing for Andy Williams, Johnny Mathis, Barbra Streisand, and anyone else we did.”
Laico never did learn why Bennett didn’t feel a rapport with the song, but it didn’t seem to affect his performance. In fact, says the engineer, pushing it to the end of the session probably worked in its favor, allowing Bennett’s voice to loosen up and some subtle, but powerful, late-night voodoo to infect the delivery. “The first two takes of it were for levels and for everyone to find an approach to the song, including Tony,” he recalls. “On the third take, Tony says, ‘That’s it, let’s not do any more.’ A while earlier, Mitch had left because he had an early appointment the next morning. So, I had to make a decision. So I says, ‘Tony, we’re still looking for the one we need. We’ve gone this long, let’s do one more.’ That next one was the one.”
Laico had been tapping into the 30th Street studio’s remarkable pair of live echo chambers during the session, sending signal through an aux into a speaker in the chamber and returning it via a Neumann U67. Bennett heard it in his headphones, though the track was recorded dry with only a touch of EQ and some compression from a Columbia-built compressor.
After the session folded at around 3 a.m., Laico made a rough mix for Miller to hear the next day. The multitrack master, on a reel of Ampex tape, went to the studios at 799 Seventh Avenue, where Mike Figlio would do the final mix. Figlio, who had started work at Columbia in 1959 and today runs a well-known and eponymously named restaurant at the top of Music Row in Nashville, remembers that the studio in the 799 building was on the top floor, and would, in a few years, be vacated by Columbia and become A&R Studios, owned in part by Phil Ramone.
The tracks presented to Figlio were meticulous, characteristic of Laico’s recordings, he says. “Frank had a good habit of keeping different elements on separate tracks, like strings and horns, and keeping the rhythm section grouped together,” he says.
As might have been expected, Figlio says he mixed the record with Bennett’s vocal fairly well up front. However, he also notes that mixers had certain biases that crept through and marked their mixes. “You can always tell a mixer’s background,” Figlio says. “Nine times out of 10, he’ll favor his own instrument. If he was drummer when he was younger, the drums will be louder. I was a vocalist.”
The mix was fast; Figlio estimates that he spent about an hour on the first song of the session, getting sounds and balances, with each successive mix going by more quickly, and “I Left My Heart…” was the last song on the reel. Figlio says he put virtually no EQ on the track, but did run the vocal and the strings through the 799 studio’s famous stairwell echo chamber, seven stories tall.
Like many of Tony Bennett’s hits, “I Left My Heart In San Francisco” went to the Top 10. This one stayed on the charts for three years, won the Grammy for Record of the Year in 1962 and helped Bennett win another Grammy for Best Solo Vocal Performance, Male, that same year. And not surprisingly, Bennett came to love the song, just like everyone else.
--Dan Daley / Mixonline