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Subject Topic: Bobbie Gentry - Ode To Billie Joe Post ReplyPost New Topic
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crapfromthepast
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Posted: 17 November 2019 at 11:50pm | IP Logged Quote crapfromthepast

Just a few mastering notes to pass along.

The first CD I have that includes the song is Time-Life's Classic Rock Vol. 15 1967 Shakin' All Over (1989). Here, it has noise reduction (listen for the absence of hiss on the fade), and has the left and right channels reversed. Not good. The same analog transfer (NR and all) is used on:
  • Heartland/Warner Special Products' 2-CD Hooked On A Feeling (1995)
Two years later, Time-Life's Superhits Vol. 5 1967 (1991) seemed to use the same source tape as Classic Rock, but swapped the left and right channels. I thought that it might have somehow omitted the noise reduction (or maybe performed one more analog step that added a small amount of hiss?), but it still sounds pinched and muffled on this disc. Unfortunately, there are a bunch of CDs that all use the same analog transfer as Superhits:
  • Time-Life's AM Gold Vol. 8 1967 (1991) - digitally identical
  • Reader's Digest's 4-CD American Pie (1998)
  • Time-Life's 2-CD Classic Country Vol. 7 Golden '60s (1998)
  • Time-Life's 2-CD Singers And Songwriters Vol. 14 1964-1969 (2001)
  • Time-Life's 2-CD Singers And Songwriters Vol. 20 The Folk Years Yesterday's Gone (2002)
  • Time-Life's Classic Country Queens Of Country (2003)
And if that's all you had to go by, you'd think that the song just sounded pinched and muffled.

Until Bill Inglot (or someone at Rhino) unearthed a significantly better source tape for the song, for Rhino's Billboard Top Pop Hits 1967 (1995). Plenty of glorious tape hiss, and now you can hear all the reverb! Plus, the fade extends farther than all the other discs listed above. I avoid hyperbole in posts here on the forum, but this one really is a night-and-day difference, compared to everything above.

The version on Cema's cheapie Rock-N-Roll Greatest Hits Vol. 3 Late 60's (1995) seems to use the same source tape as the Rhino disc, but adds noise reduction. Boo.

My recommendation, by a country mile: Rhino's Billboard Top Pop Hits 1967 (1995)

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AutumnAarilyn
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Posted: 18 November 2019 at 12:15am | IP Logged Quote AutumnAarilyn

My recommendation is: The Girl from Chickasaw County-The
Complete Capitol Masters 8 cd set.
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Posted: 20 December 2019 at 9:42am | IP Logged Quote garye

AutumnAarilyn is right. The Girl from Chickasaw County
not only has the best sounding version of "Billy Joe"
but also Bobbie's classic 1970 hit, "Fancy" including
the 3:15 Mono Radio Edit of the single, which was hard
to find for years.
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crapfromthepast
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Posted: 23 November 2024 at 10:01pm | IP Logged Quote crapfromthepast

Mono

The 45 is mono, and doesn't seem to exist in the digital world.

Stereo

The song started appearing on some relatively common compilations in 1989. I've noticed that many of those tracks base their masterings on some earlier release. I don't have any earlier releases for this particular song, so I'll just document some of the early CDs where "Ode" appeared.

In 1989, the song appeared on a 10-track collection from Capitol called Bobbie Gentry's Greatest!, which is a CD release of a 1969 LP.

The song appeared on three cheap-looking discs in 1990, all on Curb: 60's Hits Country Great Records Of The Decade Vol. 1, 60's Hits Great Records Of The Decade Vol. 1, and an 11-track Bobbie Gentry Greatest Hits.

The song appeared on a 10-track multi-artist compilation from Capitol Records Nashville called All Time Country Classics Volume 1 in 1991, and a nice-looking 20-track multi-artist compilation from Capitol called When AM Was King Fiftieth Anniversary (1992).

I don't have any of the above. EDIT: I found a file labeled "Curb CD" in Mark M's folders. Yay, Mark! I've updated the info below to include the Curb info.

The Curb version has very little reverb overall. The vocals are relatively dry, and have a much greater dynamic range than the rest of the instrumentation. (If you look at the waveform, the vocals seem huge compared to the guitar.) The same analog transfer is used on:
  • Time-Life's Classic Rock Vol. 15 1967 Shakin' All Over (1989) - has left/right channels swapped
  • Time-Life's Country USA Vol. 17 1967 (1990)
  • Time-Life's Superhits Vol. 5 1967 (1991)
  • Time-Life's AM Gold Vol. 8 1967 (1991)
  • Heartland/Warner Special Products' 2-CD Hooked On A Feeling (1995) - left/right channels swapped
  • Reader's Digest's multi-CD American Pie (1998)
  • Time-Life's 2-CD Classic Country Vol. 7 Golden '60s (1998)
  • Time-Life's 2-CD Treasury Of Folk Music Vol. 4 Folk Rock (1999)
  • Time-Life's Spirit Of The '60s Singers And Songwriters (2000)
  • Time-Life's 2-CD Singers And Songwriters Vol. 14 1964-1969 (2001)
  • Time-Life's 2-CD Singers And Songwriters Vol. 20 The Folk Years Yesterday's Gone (2002)
  • Time-Life's Classic Country Queens Of Country (2003)
  • Time-Life's 2-CD Classic Country Vol. 26 Queens Of Country (2003)
  • Ace UK's Chartbusters USA Vol. 3 (2003) - left/right channels swapped
  • TM Century track no. 00003050
Time-Life certainly knew how to repackage.

EDIT: At some point, there was a new mix for the song, with significantly more reverb. Listen to the reverb on the word "plow" at 1:19. The panning seems a bit different, too. For example, listen around 0:56. In the dry version, the strings are panned a bit to one side. In the reverby version, they're closer to center. (If you look at the waveform, the vocals are not as pronounced as the Curb version.)

The oldest CD I have with this new mix is Rhino's Billboard Top Pop Hits 1967 (1995, RE-1 reissue but I'm not sure that a non-RE-1 disc exists).

There's another analog transfer that's almost certainly from a CD released 1995 or earlier, but I don't know which one. It seems to use the same source tape as Billboard. It appears on:
  • Cema's Rock N Roll Greatest Hits Of All Time Vol. 3 (1995) - has added noise reduction
  • Time-Life's Classic Country More Great Story Songs (2002)
  • Time-Life's 2-CD Classic Country Vol. 24 Great Story Songs II (2002)
  • Time-Life's 2-CD Classic Country Hard To Find Hits (2003) - I personally find "hard to find" a little hard to believe, in light of all of the above Time-Life releases
  • Time-Life's 2-CD AM Gold Hang On Sloopy (2021)
And a few outliers that aren't based on any of the above masterings:
  • Capitol Nashville's The Girl From Chickasaw County The Complete Capitol Masters (Box Set) (2018) - sound is similar in reverb to Billboard, but EQ isn't as bright
  • Ode To Bobbie Gentry (2000, UK release) - sound is comparable to the Time-Life releases above, with vey little reverb
  • TM Century track no. 00007977 - from vinyl? I hear artifacts that aren't on the other discs listed above. Listen to the vocals from about 0:25 to 0:30, and I hear some vocal distortion. There's a little tick in the left channel around 0:47 in the word "Billie".
My recommendations

For the mono 45 version, you'll need vinyl.

EDIT: For the stereo LP version (which I believe to be the "dry" version from the Curb CDs), you can grab any of the three 1990 Curb CDs.

EDIT: For the stereo remix (which I believe to be the more-reverby version), go with Rhino's Billboard Top Pop Hits 1967 (1995). As noted above, the version on The Girl From Chickasaw County The Complete Capitol Masters (Box Set) (2018) sounds nice, too.

Edited by crapfromthepast on 24 November 2024 at 1:43pm


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davidclark
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Posted: 24 November 2024 at 5:35pm | IP Logged Quote davidclark

When I listen to the mono 45 mix, I hear the reverb on "plow", and in general the song has reverb.
I do hear the difference on the two stereo mixes, one rather dry, the other with reverb. The
question remains, did the stereo LP match the 45 reverb, or was it the drier mix.? If Ron's
conclusion is correct regarding the Curb CDs beting a dry stereo LP, perhaps those later CDs
have it mixed with more reverb to better match the 45?

I would really like to hear the original stereo LP. Anyone have the stereo LP to confirm?

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NightAire
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Posted: 24 November 2024 at 9:01pm | IP Logged Quote NightAire

Do David's notes suggest that the mono 45 is a dedicated mix rather than a stereo fold-down?

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RichM921
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Posted: 24 November 2024 at 9:17pm | IP Logged Quote RichM921

When I worked on air at an oldies station in the ‘90s, we had two versions.
On GoldDisc 405 was the reverb version, and on GoldDisc U4 was the dry
version. The one that the station chose to play was the dry version. But I
always thought the reverb version sounded much better, so I would always
substitute that version when the song came up on the log on my shift.
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davidclark
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Posted: 26 November 2024 at 8:27pm | IP Logged Quote davidclark

I found this what is stated as a dub of the 1967 (stereo) LP:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QYZu6kcdY9E

It has the reverb, so I've concluded, for myself at least, that the reverb mix is
the original (the stereo pretty much matching the reverb of the mono 45) while
the dry mix is a later version - as to WHEN it was first issued, I don't know
that.

[added later] ... Oh, and our very own Mark Matthews had determined the
mono is a fold-down, so that means that dry mix is NOT the original LP.

Edited by davidclark on 27 November 2024 at 1:04am


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crapfromthepast
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Posted: 27 November 2024 at 6:02am | IP Logged Quote crapfromthepast

I think I'm convinced that the reverb mix is the 1967 mono mix from the 45, and the dry mix is a non-hit stereo mix that may have first appeared on the 1990 Curb CDs.

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eriejwg
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Posted: 28 November 2024 at 5:31pm | IP Logged Quote eriejwg

I tried folding the reverby stereo mix and compared it to a
45 dub from YouTube. The folded stereo mix didn't sound
like the 45 posted on the 45 Prof's page.

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eriejwg
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Posted: 28 November 2024 at 5:42pm | IP Logged Quote eriejwg

The bass notes are much more prominent in the mono 45 mix.

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davidclark
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Posted: 28 November 2024 at 6:57pm | IP Logged Quote davidclark

John,

I agree, I noticed the same. Don't know when/where I got the MM info -
scanned email and couldn't find anything.

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