


The opening song “Save the Life of My Child” sounds much more urgent and exciting and the female voices cry out as if from some pit of agony. The mono mix, which I first heard on a bootleg CD and which can probably be tracked down on YouTube, is really the way to hear this album. It’s like a treasure hunt finding the best sounding version (okay, okay a tad obsessive I know but that’s what makes collecting fun!). Instead of the one version available to download, each pressing of an album is unique and can sound different depending on the part of the country it was pressed in, the plant, the engineer, etc. The album is here in all it’s analog glory.įor those downloaders or streamers out there, you hear in analog and I think the reason some people are attracted to vinyl again is that the analog mixes are much easier on the ears and nervous system.

So if you want to hear Simon and Garfunkel closest to how the masters sounded when they were released, track down original stereo or mono pressings if you can find them in decent shape.Īs for this pressing I just found last week, the cover is kind of worn but the vinyl is in nice shape thank goodness. In fact the stereo mixes are great too it’s just that I have a preference for the mono mixes of these albums.Īnother note, Columbia Records who own and release Simon and Garfunkel recordings had a practice in the 60’s and 70’s I’ve read in which they used the original master tapes (used to make the vinyl pressings) over and over again instead of making a dub thus wearing out the original tapes. The stereo vinyl isn’t bad at all mind you. They are punchier, the instruments – especially Paul Simon’s guitar work – really pop out at you as if you are in the recording studio with them. Simon and Garfunkel in mono sound superb. For some reason it’s rumored that Paul Simon won’t allow the Simon and Garfunkel mono versions to be reissued which is a shame if true. The only way to get these albums in mono is to track down the original 60’s vinyl pressings and it’s well worth it. In fact any young readers out there (or anyone interested in vinyl frankly) should check out the first five Simon and Garfunkel albums which are available in mono (“Wednesday Morning 3 a.m.”, “Sounds of Silence”, “Parsley, Sage, Rosemary and Thyme”, “The Graduate” (another really rare mono Lp) and “Bookends”. The mono mixes tended to sound more alive and cleaner and were meant to cut over the din of the tiny speakers people were using.Īnyway, back to “Bookends”, the mono mix of this landmark Simon and Garfunkel album is really quite lovely sounding. Mono generally is more in your face, louder and more shall I say it ballsy then stereo especially pre-1965 as stereo was a newer format and producers weren’t used to mixing in stereo. Now, readers who aren’t music geeks – gee I’m wondering if you’re still even reading lol – need to know that most pop/rock music before 1968 was produced to be heard on tiny AM radios or small record players with tiny speakers and was predominately mixed in mono. Modern stereo includes surround sound with sound coming out of your ears, under your seat and every direction known to man but in the 60’s it was either one or two channels. Mono (one channel) had the sound dead center (all instruments and vocals coming out of the center if you listen on a two speaker stereo system) and stereo had two channels with the instruments and vocals spread out across the two speakers. Okay, lesson time: In the 1960’s, pop music was available in either mono or stereo versions or mixes. This is the first copy I’ve found out in the wild as they say and not on ebay. Thank goodness this copy was under $40 as it tends to go for well over $150 to upwards of $300 if you can even locate a copy. It was released in April 1968 at a time when mono records were being phased out. To say this album in mono is rare is a major understatement. Okay, you have to be a record fan or you might have a bit of a queasy stomach about now.īUT, I happened upon a mono pressing of Simon and Garfunkel’s best (in my opinion) album called “Bookends”. Last week, I was on vacation and in my usual round of record store hunting (sorry Doug! lol) I found a vinyl album that I have been searching for for over twenty – yes twenty – years. Good things come to those who wait – or so they say.
