07.03.1980 Sophia Gardens, Cardiff, Wales
Disc 1:
1. Intruder - 6.05
2. The Start - 1.53
3. I Don't Remember - 4.28
4. Solsbury Hill - 7.07
5. Family Snapshot - 4.35
6. Milgram's 37 - 5.16
7. Modern Love - 4.21
8. Not One of Us - 5.26
9. Lead a Normal Life - 5.48
Disc 2:
1. Moribund the Burgermeister - 4.42
2. Mother of Violence - 4.32
3. Humdrum - 3.53
4. Band Introductions - 1.35
5. Games without Frontiers - 6.18
6. And through the Wire - 4.29
7. I Go Swimming - 4.21
8. Biko - 8.07
9. On the Air - 5.11
10. Here Comes the Flood - 2.18
Total Running Time: 90.25
Note : Good (-) sound from a soundboard. Downloaded from Dimeadozen in Flac encoding.
The Author says :
"The Cardiff
1980 recording is a bit of an odd one. It is special because it is one
of the very few professional recordings of the "China 1984 Tour" (as
the Melt Tour was called officially). However, for a
soundboard-recording it has a lot of problems. There's a fair amount of
hiss. The first half of the show missed one channel already from the
beginning on (this was on the master tape), and the second was in
stereo. Also the first half of Moribund is sadly missing. Apart from
these flaws, the recording is really muddy nd misses clarity.
Still, this
recording got my interest. About a year ago I got a complete copy of
this gig in a trade. I was happy to find this, because the usual
circulating version, The Watcher, was incomplete. What was the most
interesting was that one of the previously missing tracks, Moribund the
Burgermeister had some great stereo effects during the "I Will Find
Out" part. Games without Frontiers, which was missing too on The
Watcher featured some nice stereo synths as well. The new complete
recording also offered Here Comes the Flood and the band introductions.
Another interesting moment that was edited out on The Watcher, was the
introduction to Family Snapshot, which was plagued by technical
problems.
Sadly, this complete recording was plagued by other flaws: hiss reduction and speed
correction were
used. Both with bad results: the hiss reduction was so high that all
the highs were completely gone, and the speed correction introduced all
sorts of clicks/beat-splices/unstabilities.
Later on, I
found a new source, which was 2 CD-rs made from a 4th gen. recording. I
also got a tape, but this was too hissy to use. I decided to use the
4th gen. as the base of the remaster (see WHAT WAS DONE?).
Back to March 7,
1980. Peter and some members of the band had the flu that night. Peter
decided to use a vacuum-machine to get his voice in better shape, which
seemed to work to some degree.
The first disc
is in mono, but the second disc is in stereo. Some of the synthesizer
pads and effects sound wonderful in stereo. Especially Humdrum, and And
through the Wire have a nice warmth to them, because of these synths.
As said before, Moribund the Burgermeister has a great stereo vocal
effect.
This recording
is FAR from perfect, but as it as one of the very few professional
recordings of the Melt Tour, it has some historical value, and is worth
trying out if only for Peter's "I Will Found Out" in Moribund :)
WHAT WAS DONE?
The first part
of the recording was in mono. Therefore I used the best channel, with
the most high frequencies, which was the left one. I copied this
channel to the right one. After that equalization was done. Following
to that was multiband-compression, which I used to get some more of the
high frequencies, and to keep the hiss at a minimum. To create
'artificial stereo' I used a trick with phasing which makes a stereo
sound out of a mono sound.
Some final equalization was done. Also, the subharmonics were removed, as well as the
>16kHz range,
which didn't contain any music at all. Since the recording sounded very
sterile I added a little bit of reverb (which also helped a little to
warm up the sound and get the vocal a little more to the front)
The second part of the recording was in stereo. The process done was basically the same,
although I did
use both channels of course. There was a problem with the balance of
the two channels. In one channel, the high frequencies and the low
frequencies were too low, while the mid range was too high. The
opposite happened on the other channel. This was corrected. After that
equalization, multiband-compression and final equalization were done,
as well as removing the subharmonics and >16kHz-range. Some
different values were used during the equalization and the
multiband-compression because of the different sound during this part.
There was also a small speed problem on the second part of the show. During Moribund
the speed was
right but at the end of the disc the speed was about one note too high.
This was corrected. Some volume restorations were done. Finally some
reverb was added here as well.
A few words of talking after Lead a Normal Life and the first three seconds of Moribund
were not on the 4th gen, so I used the above-mentioned 'hiss reducted/speed corrected'
to fill this gap.
The Genoa audience recording was used to fill in the gap in Moribund.
There were two gaps inbetween the songs near the end, which were corrected.
Finally, fade-outs were apllied and the recording was normalized. Then the recording was
cut-up in tracks, sector-boundary aligned.
A FINAL THANK YOU
Thanks to David Dunnington for providing the 4th gen. recording.
Thanks to Eric Hall, for helping find info and the best sources of this recording.
Thanks to everyone who listened to the small remastered samples and suggesting
improvements on the sound.
Hope you enjoy this remaster! "
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