EXPLAINED: Mono vs Stereo Records

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  • @vinyleyezz
    @vinyleyezz  4 года назад +175

    Side note: MONO is also the name of a Japanese instrumental band, and a medical disease...😐

    • @chillmike6160
      @chillmike6160 4 года назад +4

      And I oop-

    • @RodolfoAmbriz
      @RodolfoAmbriz 4 года назад +18

      And "monkey" in spanish.

    • @39zack
      @39zack 4 года назад +4

      Vinyl Eyezz but do you know what mono means in Japanese?

    • @jannytye2037
      @jannytye2037 4 года назад +2

      Song of the Day for your next video: Van Halen - The Seventh Seal!

    • @vinyleyezz
      @vinyleyezz  4 года назад +2

      Zack I don’t....lol 😂

  • @milfslayer6193
    @milfslayer6193 4 года назад +268

    Song of the day: My Sweet Lord - George Harrison

  • @GameofTravis
    @GameofTravis 4 года назад +97

    Song of the day: "One Of These Days" from Meddle by Pink Floyd

  • @gotham61
    @gotham61 4 года назад +78

    There’s nothing “fake” about the mono sound you get when playing a mono pressing with a stereo cartridge. It’s a true mono signal, although surface noise will be significantly reduced if you use a mono cartridge.

    • @carlosu1021
      @carlosu1021 4 года назад

      Nice! I just bought my first mono record and was worried about that

    • @deanwhite4190
      @deanwhite4190 3 года назад +2

      Mono 45 rpm records don't always track very well with an elliptical stylus. These records were meant to be played by a cartridge with a conical stylus. On 45's an elliptical stylus sometimes creates unwanted noise in older records and 7 inch records made from styrene plastic because that type of needle is sharper and goes deeper into the record's grooves and picks up unwanted noise from record wear s at the bottom of the record groove. Therefore as highly regarded as elliptical styli by hi fi enthusiasts older and worn records, even LPs sound much better when played with a high quality stereo cartridge fitted with a conical stylus. This is for those who wonder why some of their records don't play with good sound quality.

    • @gotham61
      @gotham61 2 года назад +1

      @@skipandslide No. A scratch results in mostly vertical movement of the stylus. A mono record only has lateral information (side to side), and a mono cartridge only creates a voltage from lateral movement. It is effectively deaf to vertical motion.

    • @xxEzraBxxx
      @xxEzraBxxx 2 года назад +1

      You can use covert your RCA cables into a mono output by using a male-to-female convertor, then to a female-to-male convertor, or if you have a mono button on your receiver

    • @ajaronis1
      @ajaronis1 Год назад +1

      @@xxEzraBxxx That makes no sense to me. IF the record is recorded in MONO, then you're going to get MONO thus converter or button is not needed. IF you have a record in STEREO, and want to hear it in MONO, then you use the MONO button your receiver. I have tested this out myself.

  • @therugburnz
    @therugburnz 4 года назад +74

    My dad worked for CBS and we had 'sample not for sale' promo singles that were delivered to radio stations. One side would be mono, the o the stereo.

    • @videoplusdvd
      @videoplusdvd 4 года назад +3

      Many of the mono versions were fold-downs from stereo, for AM stations, and the stereo ones were for FM.

    • @therugburnz
      @therugburnz 4 года назад +6

      @@videoplusdvd The mono from stereo was done quite often, that is why you see an oscilloscope on top of the console's shelf. During the microphone placement part of recording they checked every combination of mics to assure mono compatibility. They try to keep a 45 degree line with positive slope. This was very important for stereo also. If the slope went to far vertical or horizontal the needle on the cutting lathe would jump out of the groove being cut. This isn't as important now but some old schoolers check for it anyway.

    • @bear1more287
      @bear1more287 4 года назад

      Honestly when I play my 45’s from the 70’s really can’t tell the difference on the mono or stereo maybe it’s my stereo it self but can’t tell the difference..

    • @bigmsound
      @bigmsound 4 года назад

      @@videoplusdvd Many of the fold-downs from the late 60's and throughout the 70's were created through the Haeco-CSG process. Practically all record labels used CSG at some point for their fold downs, but Atlantic, A&M and Warner Bros used it the most.

  • @theblakex
    @theblakex 4 года назад +46

    All of the early Beatles albums sound amazing in mono. Pet Sounds is another great album to buy in mono.

    • @n.miller907
      @n.miller907 2 года назад +2

      "Pet Sounds" is a better sounding album in surround sound. ;-)

    • @killer92173
      @killer92173 2 года назад +2

      And Pink Floyd's debut album The Piper at the Gates of Dawn!!

    • @sindrebruset4906
      @sindrebruset4906 2 года назад +1

      @@killer92173 Piper in mono has several details not present on the stereo mix. However, what is Piper without the exciting panning?

    • @zweePOP
      @zweePOP Год назад

      Piper is mono is incredible. the ending panning of Interstellar Overdrive getting shoved into the single channel makes it sound almost sickeningly psychedelic (in a good way)

    • @nickb5371
      @nickb5371 Год назад

      @n.miller907 Brian said headphones in the dark but that's my second

  • @nealammerman6768
    @nealammerman6768 4 года назад +30

    One way to demonstrate the difference is to listen on headphones.. From a mono record, the music sounds like it’s in the center of the listener’s head. The music is right down the middle. Play the same piece in stereo, and you hear different voices and instruments in each ear., adding a wide soundstage. Sure, stereo is superior, but I like throwing on my old mono 45’s and listening to them they were meant to be heard then. It works especially well with Phil Spector’s “wall of sound” technique . He made layer on top of layer of thick sound with knowing it would be listened to on little transistor AM radios and single speaker car systems. Listen to a 45 of “Be My Baby” and you get the full effect of mono as he intended it.. Even The Beach Boys mastered their best and early songs in mono. “Don’t Worry Baby” in mono is just more authentic than some of their remixed stereo versions.

    • @garrypeak4277
      @garrypeak4277 4 года назад +2

      Neal Ammerman I’ve read at different times, that many Beatles vinyl collectors prefer the Mono box set pressings over the stereo pressings, and I always scratched my noggin over that, but what you said makes all the sense in the world.

    • @kenj8uk
      @kenj8uk 4 года назад +1

      Linn sondec

    • @nealammerman6768
      @nealammerman6768 4 года назад +1

      Garry Peak I’ve heard the same thing! I remember how thrilled I was to buy the “Meet The Beatles” LP! It was mono, and I was perfectly happy with that! One of my regrets in life is I gave it away to a friend along with my early Beatles 45’s. There were stereo versions of that album ( generally at $4.98 compared to $3.98 for mono.) I don’t know all the controversies about the stereo mixes, and most purists prefer the mono. It might me that the mixing and balance on the master tapes were just not as good. Maybe someone knows more about that? I know with The Beach Boys, Brian Wilson much preferred the mono mix, even though stereo had become common use for master tapes by 1962, There were stereo recordings made later, but were re-recordings. I have a couple “Best Of..” LP’s of them with what Capitol called “Duophonic “ sound, which I think was a technique of taking the mono masters and doing some channel separation to make fake stereo.. which leads to a process RCA did . They tried to give a stereo effect to old mono recordings. They even did that with 1940’s Glenn Miller songs. No way to make true stereo from mono, but it did give a sort of stereo separation. It worked on some and sounded good, but again.. many preferred the authenticity of how it was recorded originally.
      I think that’s part of why many prefer mono Beatles snd Beach Boys..Authenticity , without tampering with the intended mix of the original. Like Phil Spector, a lot of this music was mixed with the intent not to be listened to on audiophile component systems, but on tinny transitor radios and low quality AM single speaker car or kitchen table radios. I’d welcome input from others who can give a better technical explanation, though!

    • @nealammerman6768
      @nealammerman6768 4 года назад +1

      Just like Jarret warns us about, don’t get fooled by crappy Crosley suitcase toy record players or cheap Chinese portable radios that call themselves “full stereo!” Yes, as long as they have 2 speakers, with a stereo music source, it is “stereo.” Yet it’s meaningless hype because the stereo effect is negligible with speakers only inches apart. To get a true stereo effect, there needs to be separation. On cheap portable units , it would be far better to have one good quality mono amp /speaker than cheap crappy “stereo” . Jarred reminds us often that “ you deserve better!” The record/tape/CD was recorded with much better quality built in that is missed on junky playback equipment. Music should be enjoyed for the nuances of the performance and not at the quality of listening through a telephone. Even a good boom box produces better quality than a Crosley toy record player that looks like a suitcase.

    • @garrypeak4277
      @garrypeak4277 4 года назад

      Neal Ammerman Great. Now I’m going to be forced to track down an Ortofon Mono cartridge and a Beatles mono pressing. Same situation happened to me with Reel To Reel and my bank account has been in mourning ever since Lol.

  • @irtbmtind89
    @irtbmtind89 3 года назад +13

    5:26 The side to side groove is the sum of both channels and up and down groove is the difference. This was a really clever trick, and it means stereo records are both backwards and forwards compatible and allowed both systems to coexist essentially seamlessly. This is why a stereo record will play on a mono system without any loss of sound information and a mono record will play on a modern system with sound in both channels.

    • @jamesslick4790
      @jamesslick4790 Год назад

      Stereo records are a neat engineering feat. With open reel tape it was straight forward to go from mono to stereo: Add another head, and another amp, use two tracks half the width of the old mono tape format and call it a day (Rinse and repeat for more multi track fun). But getting TWO signals in and out of ONE groove is still impressive even 65 years later!

  • @nealammerman6768
    @nealammerman6768 4 года назад +23

    The first stereo phonographs were introduced in 1958. There were some master tapes recorded in stereo as early as 1954 ( RCA Living Stereo, etc). 45 rpm’s were nearly all in mono but by the late 60’s more were stereo.

    • @CorvetteCoonass
      @CorvetteCoonass 4 года назад +1

      Yep, Mercury Living Presence was recording in stereo before 1958 as well. I actually have a Magnavox 185 AA stereo tube amp from 1959 that was part of that stereo revolution. It's in need of restoration but I can't wait to hear how my records sounded like 60 years ago.

  • @leandrosv82694
    @leandrosv82694 4 года назад +14

    Song of the day :I want you(she is so heavy)-The Beatles

  • @richardlara5466
    @richardlara5466 4 года назад +13

    We have a lot of mono 45's records at home that was released before the 70's here in the Philippines. There is a really big difference in sound compared to stereo pressings. My parents love collecting instrumental music from orchestras back then.

  • @matsamuel5655
    @matsamuel5655 4 года назад +20

    My QUADRAPHONIC copy of Tubular Bells has a sticker on the sleeve saying ' A Quadraphonic recording for people with 4 ears'.

    • @vinyleyezz
      @vinyleyezz  4 года назад +3

      Haha 😂 nice 👍

    • @jonnorthall8526
      @jonnorthall8526 4 года назад +1

      There is also a little snippet of sound at the end of the 2nd side that wasn't included in the stereo versions or subsequent quad releases. I heard it in quad once and what a sound it was. Fantastic

    • @matsamuel5655
      @matsamuel5655 4 года назад +1

      @@jonnorthall8526 Isn't it a go- kart or something?

  • @ttheone3518
    @ttheone3518 4 года назад +14

    Song of the day: modern talking - you’re my heart, you’re my soul

  • @artamussumatra6286
    @artamussumatra6286 4 года назад +3

    I really like the way mono records sound thru a stereo cartridge, I don’t detect any crosstalk, or distortion. It definitely has different stuff going on in each channel, but that seems to give the music a pleasant, subtle ambience, and everything sounds super clear. Stereo mixes often have parts that you can tell could, and maybe should be louder, but they aren’t - where mono sounds more even, and life like, ironically, more three dimensional.

  • @maximobaviera
    @maximobaviera 4 года назад +7

    Here in Argentina mono records were made until the 80's

  • @mm-qf7vw
    @mm-qf7vw 4 года назад

    I'm 70 years old this December. I was a young bystander to my Dad building his own Heathkit Mono Amp on our dining room table, this was 1957. I was only about 6 or so but I defiantly remember my Dad exclaiming after his successful test of the completed amp "HONEY, THIS DESERVES A CUP OF COFFEE." Dunno why that always stuck in my mind. His preamp was a plug n play Altec Lansing Mono unit, with 4 Altec Lansing speakers, two 15" woofers and two 18" Horns, in home made cabinets (with totally different styles for each cabinet ), who cared before stereo came out. He also had a Altec Lansing tuner but I don't remember much about it. Over the years I grew up watching myself grow up and watching Dad's sound system grow up. Sister wasn't interested and Brother was too young, brother was less than one year old. Over the years he upgraded to Stereo (same speakers) and that system lasted until his death in 2010. His original Altec speakers are here in front of me now running off of a Onkyo A/V amp. Had all 4 speakers rebuilt at Orange County Speaker in Orange County, CA and they sound absolutely incredible still today.

  • @nathanswaffar9600
    @nathanswaffar9600 4 года назад +7

    Song of the day: Wonderful Tonight - Eric Clapton

  • @jonturner564
    @jonturner564 2 года назад +5

    I have both Magica Mystery Tour and Sgt. Pepper in mono and stereo. The mono version of Sgt. Pepper sounds completely different that the stereo version. I guess it was mixed differently. Some of the sounds are much clearer and distinct with mono. I also have the white album in both versions. I have noticed that with the white album, some of the arrangements are completely different too. I enjoy having both versions of these albums.

    • @killer92173
      @killer92173 Год назад

      I know in the 60s, The Beatles mainly focused on the Mono mixing, whereas Stereo at the time was more of an afterthought. I think Sgt Pepper in Mono is king, same with Pink Floyd's Piper at the Gates of Dawn on Mono.

  • @somerecordmaster8997
    @somerecordmaster8997 4 года назад +30

    For song of the day; House of the Rising Sun - the animals

    • @robsemail
      @robsemail 4 года назад +2

      Good idea, but I prefer the Frijid Pink version of that song.

    • @somerecordmaster8997
      @somerecordmaster8997 4 года назад +2

      @@robsemail that one is good to.

  • @johnb6723
    @johnb6723 2 года назад +1

    A box with a mono/stereo switch on it also ensures mono sound on 78rpm shellac records (with much reduced crackling) and also on any other mono records.

  • @Aidan.w
    @Aidan.w 4 года назад +8

    Song of the day: Your love - The Outfield

  • @BlueNeon81
    @BlueNeon81 4 года назад +4

    You forgot one thing: mono cartridge is useful only when playing original mono pressings up to late 1960's. Later mono pressings are basically stereo records with monaural recording. Why does it matter? Stereo cartridges have slightly different shape of the stylus than dedicated mono cartridges and original mono vinyls have also different shape of grooves (but same width as stereo grooves), so playing newer mono represses from 1970's and onwards with mono cartridge, may destroy (reshape) the grooves.

  • @alexandrostsak6377
    @alexandrostsak6377 4 года назад +8

    Song of the day: Like a Hurricane - Neil Young

  • @exittiming2789
    @exittiming2789 4 года назад +12

    Most MONO pressings are the most desired by collectors. Usually the masters originated on that format and the quality greatly exceeded the stereo format. When I look for older vinyl, I try to seek out the MONO pressings even though they are hella expensive

    • @killer92173
      @killer92173 2 года назад +2

      The recent Pink Floyd pressings of their first 2 albums are in Mono, and both sound great!! And many say that The Piper at the Gates of Dawn is best heard in MONO.

  • @tommyboyz6291
    @tommyboyz6291 4 года назад +3

    Song of the day:
    Audrey - Dave Brubeck Quartet
    Cool fact: the song is mono.

  • @scottjackson1420
    @scottjackson1420 4 года назад +3

    My song of day suggestion ... Life In A Northern Town.
    I'm definitely a pre-80's guy, but that song is brilliant.

  • @mikemulholland2862
    @mikemulholland2862 4 года назад +5

    LOVE Mono! A lot of times, mono records had a different mix, so it's like listening to another record sometimes. Both formats are good, but I have a soft spot for mono. Especially being a Beatles fan.

    • @jimmybuckets5863
      @jimmybuckets5863 2 года назад

      Yeah I assumed all mono records were the exact same as their stereo counterparts, just with one channel. Hearing the differences in the Beatles records for the first time was like finding a hidden treasure chest

    • @mikemulholland2862
      @mikemulholland2862 2 года назад

      @@jimmybuckets5863 Enjoy Jimmy!

  • @ds99
    @ds99 4 года назад

    I have several records that I bought in the 1960s that are mono. They’ve always sounded good on my stereo record player. I did not realize getting a mono cartridge would make them sound better. That’s a great tip. I don’t play them much anymore. My turntable is identical to the Audio Technica one you had in the video. A sweet turntable. I have digitized many of my records with it.

  • @JOSEEYW
    @JOSEEYW 4 года назад

    That was an awesome explanation about the mono/stereo characteristics and differences.
    The one thing I was totally unaware of was the fact that there are dedicated mono cartridges. I didn't know about the possible issues resulting from playing mono records with a stereo cartridge either.
    Thank you so much for the enlightening video!

  • @martymannering8361
    @martymannering8361 4 года назад +7

    Song of the day
    The Burger King veggie menu rap-Marty mannering, Issy mano, Ben Mano

  • @videoplusdvd
    @videoplusdvd 4 года назад +1

    What wasn’t mentioned was that pop music records were mixed for mono because that’s the kind of record players most kids had, and popular AM stations also only broadcast mono. Singles were generally mono. Steteo was for the adults to listen to “long-hair” and easy listening on their hi-fi systems

  • @channelzero2252
    @channelzero2252 4 года назад

    I found an old 45 of "A Hard Day's Night" by The Beatles, a proper 1964 copy from New Zealand. I put it on and even though it was very scratchy, it sounded awesome. So awesome that, even though I've known that song for years, I started to get the impression of how they (The Beatles) made such an impression at the time.

  • @blakemeding7917
    @blakemeding7917 Год назад

    Ive heard the mono Beatles records, they sound great. But at the same time LOVE how the Beatles mixed there stereo records. They are so dramatically mixed with hard pans left and right. Drums slammed to the right, guitars slammed to the left, vocals could be all over the place with backing vocals on the opposite side. It is pretty old fashioned way of mixing, but it feels more lively and fun to me.

  • @Raj-gn7xm
    @Raj-gn7xm 4 года назад +1

    I use a Denon DL-110 stereo cartridge. Frankly mono records sound great. If there is any phase shifting it just adds to the sound stage. The mono mix is very important to the sound. A "fold down" from a stereo is not the same.

  • @AndreaGtz
    @AndreaGtz 4 года назад +5

    There is a light that never goes out - The Smiths

  • @8080pc
    @8080pc 4 года назад

    I collected a few older big band jazz records. The vendors don't seems do know the difference between mono and stereo. It's happened 4 times now so I gave it up and went back to CDs. Most of the old stereo was clearly marked on the record covers as the record companies were proud of their stereo recordings.

  • @rcd4466
    @rcd4466 4 года назад +4

    When you listen to live music, you are a certain distance back from the music, depending on the venue. Your ears are probably about six inches apart. So by the time the sound gets to you, you are hearing pretty much the same sound in both ears. So if music is recorded in a quality fashion by a single microphone, that pretty much gives you what you hear naturally. Stereo tends to exaggerate the sound stage, like you are listening from up close, say for example, fifteen feet from the stage. That being said, when comparing both, most people tend to prefer the “exaggerated soundstage” to the more centered one, for whatever reason. That’s why American audiences when crazy over all the fake stereo with reverb added in the sixties. They thought it sounded better, even though it was far from the actual, natural sound you would hear at a live performance.

  • @BlueNeon81
    @BlueNeon81 4 года назад +3

    Be careful with the mono cartridge, it's for the mono records pressed until late 60s, today's mono records should be played only with stereo cartridge, because they were cut with the stereo cutting stylus, meanwhile mono records pressed until late 60s were cut with mono cutting stylus, which has a different size and shape.

  • @NealAmmerman
    @NealAmmerman 9 месяцев назад

    I have a lot of mono, older LP’s and 45’s . They sound awesome! But one dimensional. Never knew about getting a mono cartridge because they sound good with my stereo cartridge. I am amazed at how good the quality was when recorded if listened to on quality earphones or speakers.

  • @ErickMotta
    @ErickMotta 4 года назад +5

    Perfect Strangers - Deep Purple

  • @nealammerman6768
    @nealammerman6768 4 года назад

    There were a few stereo 45’s. as far back as 1958, not as general market or AM radio use, but for jukeboxes and demos. Tommy Edwards famous 1958 “All In The Game” was mixed in mono and stereo. It’s why reissues today can be found in stereo but the 45’s for sale to the public were mono. I have a superb mono original , a stereo 45 re-issue, as well as stereo LP and CD versions. The old mono version still sounds incredibly good!

  • @thatonedude1003
    @thatonedude1003 4 года назад

    My Dad is a collector as well. He is deaf in one ear...so he loves to put on Mono albums with headphones, because he gets it all channeled through his good side.

  • @JoeMama-yk5yx
    @JoeMama-yk5yx 4 года назад +5

    Song of the day: Rosanna by Toto

  • @tinkercrab11
    @tinkercrab11 4 года назад +5

    Song of the day: Chameleon by Herbie Hancock

  • @SuperZDogg...
    @SuperZDogg... 3 года назад +4

    Song of the day: I Just Wasn’t Made For These Times - The Beach Boys

  • @zombieman81
    @zombieman81 4 года назад

    If anyone wants an interesting trip into stereo/mono look up the original "stereo" mix of The Beatles track I Am The Walrus... what sounds like a radio scanning between stations IS a radio scanning between station added actually during the mixing process live. The Beatles always did the mono mixes first and then they left the studio staff to come up with stereo later... Which is a problem when you mix in something live when doing the mono mix first, so half way through the stereo version abruptly switches to the mono mix... They pan it a little bit at the end, but that was all they could do...

  • @dbrowdie
    @dbrowdie 7 месяцев назад

    Mono mix of Paperback Writer is awesome really loud. Love that echo effect better than stereo version

  • @arnebroxleirnes418
    @arnebroxleirnes418 4 года назад +1

    It is very important to understand the difference between stereophonic sound and panned mono.
    Panning the guitar to the left and the piano to the right DOES NOT MAKE IT STEREO.

  • @Edubarca46
    @Edubarca46 4 года назад +2

    Excellent explanation. I myself prefer stereo, not only sound but photographs!! I have a nice collection of 3D stereo film cameras and they are tops. Turning back to music, you forgot to mention classical music and opera. They definitively sound much better in stereo. In opera, singers move from one side to the other and that enhances the sound experience. Also the full symphonic orchestra is much deeper and real in stereo. Listening to Beethoven's 5th. in stereo approaches the experience of going to a concert hall!! By the way, stereo by itself is not new. The first movie made in full stereophonic sound was Walt Disney's FANTASIA and he made it surround sound!!!! All this way back in 1940!! And much earlier than stereo sound recording which dates back only to 1957. By the way, radio can mostly be in stereo through FM. AM stereo is possible but much more complicated and not very practical. Thanks Jerret and greetings from Colombia.

    • @TheBudgie29
      @TheBudgie29 4 года назад

      It goes back a lot further that the Disney Movie Mentioned. They would have the Soundtrack In Stereo, then It would be played back In Sinc with the Film, on a Wire recorder (Like the Black Box In a Plane).

  • @mjallenuk
    @mjallenuk 4 года назад +1

    OK the dedicated Mono Cartridge was news to me. Thanks for that...Now I just have to convince the better half that I need one!

    • @stephensmall4172
      @stephensmall4172 4 года назад

      I've known about mono cartridges for years and wanted one for some time. I'm single i.e no other half but its the price holding me back! Quite expensive to someone currently unemployed.

  • @TheBudgie29
    @TheBudgie29 4 года назад

    I have a Mono Cart for Dedicated Mono Record Recording, of 50' and 60's singles (That i have thousands of). And Yes that Guy Is right about strange sounds You get by playing them with a Stereo Cart. I also find, that they (Stereo Carts) Lack the fullness of the Bass and It also pushed up the treble to Distortion levels, making them sound a little Harsh. But a Mono one pulls all of this together and they Sound Brilliant. Especially the 50's Rock N' Roll ones, That Bass really shakes everything.

  • @kl122002
    @kl122002 4 года назад +1

    You can also have switch the phono pre-amp or your amp into mono mode if you could have one, some examples are like Luxman CL38uC, or Aurorasound Vida. They are real expensive because of the signal pathway involves converting 2 channels information in to 1, which is a bit complicated than usual stereo phono preamp

  • @blackmore1030
    @blackmore1030 4 года назад

    If you look at the grooves very closely, you can tell whether it's mono or stereo. Mono grooves look straight (I mean perfectly circular), while stereo grooves look more crooked. A good example to check this is the Queen song Mustapha (1st song on the album Jazz), whose first half is mono, while the second half is stereo.

  • @subwayjrod1
    @subwayjrod1 4 года назад

    Thank you! This was super informative! I end up picking up a good amount of mono records from thrift stores and couldn’t find a straight forward answer on what they are until now!

  • @brysonsheldon
    @brysonsheldon 4 года назад +6

    Song Of The Day: Pneuma by Tool

  • @lisauzanas3815
    @lisauzanas3815 Год назад

    this was really helpful! If you are going to only have one record in mono BB King "The Thrill is Gone" is the one!

  • @Ludamage
    @Ludamage 4 года назад +3

    Song of the day: Steppenwolf - Born To Be Wild

  • @Ascorbicon
    @Ascorbicon Год назад

    I have “The Rolling Stones, Now” vinyl in mono and I play it on my stereo turntable and I almost promise the average listener doesn’t hear a difference it sounds just fine

  • @DrCrane1000
    @DrCrane1000 4 года назад

    It is funny that you posted a video about mono records three days ago, because I bought two weeks from now a RSD special Otis Redding live in Europe LP, which is in mono. That was my first mono record that I had and I knew next door to nothing about them, so I checked out on your channel, but I found nothing. 😃 (Although I always check first on your channel, when I have something in front of me that I don’t know about.) So I was getting a little bit affraid, and I was thinking about that I don’t buy it, but when I read about them a little bit, I ordered it from the local vinyl webshop, and you know what? It is fantastic! 😃 I mean, I don’t have a mono player, and I was worrying about it a little bit, but it sounds good in “wannabe mono” too. I think mono records could be an interesting part of any vinyl record collection despite having no mono player or stylus or whatever. I am happy to have it, I think it is so special (although its color is beautiful too - it is kinda vintage red). And I’m glad because now I’m ensured by you that I made a good decision! 😀 Cheers from Hungary! ❤️

  • @jorgemansilla9043
    @jorgemansilla9043 10 месяцев назад

    Mono for early Beatles is the best. Hard days night in particular sounds incredible.

  • @topkarat
    @topkarat 4 года назад +2

    I've been wondering about this!

  • @ronsonroll
    @ronsonroll 4 года назад +1

    When The Beatles catalogue was released recently, I bought the mono copies as I don't like the harsh stereo & a VM610MONO cartridge. I managed to find a French mono pressing of Alice Cooper - Killer.

  • @jhonwask
    @jhonwask 4 года назад

    I like STEREO for the sitting down experience. I like MONO for listening pleasure while doing housework or hanging out with friends. I have many great mono recordings.

  • @martinarg101
    @martinarg101 4 года назад

    Well I have lots of mono Lps from the 6Os and they sound great with my 2M red. One thing my mother mentioned is that most of STEREO records were more expensive than MONO thats the reason she bought MONO most of the times and she gave me some of them since she prefers cds now.

  • @Alchemy97
    @Alchemy97 4 года назад +2

    Song of the day: Sultans of swing - dire straits

  • @kinggold6066
    @kinggold6066 4 года назад +8

    Song of the day: Feel good Inc. the gorillaz

  • @varsza100
    @varsza100 4 года назад +3

    I have Miles Davis Kind of blue in mono and stereo vinyl as well. The mono version sounds much much better even if the space is narrower.

  • @FrankieTeardrop1998
    @FrankieTeardrop1998 2 года назад +1

    Mono is great for when you are sharing earphones listening a song. You both hear the same thing without missing out on any instruments.

  • @SilverGreen93
    @SilverGreen93 4 года назад

    You can always use a Y cable and mix the the channels before getting in the amplifier to eliminate unwanted noise and convert stereo image to mono.

  • @blakepdx
    @blakepdx 4 года назад +1

    My receiver has a mono/stereo button. I have a few Nina Simone albums in mono, not on purpose, just coincidentally. I tried them on both mono and stereo setting with an ortophon om stylus, and the mono records on mono setting did sound better!

  • @rawleypoint
    @rawleypoint 4 года назад

    The Beatles have always said, if you want to hear their best format, listen to their mono versions. More time was spent producing their mono sound than to the stereo pressings, by a 3-1 margin. Their last two recordings, “Let it Be” and “Abbey Road” were the only two not recorded for mono.

  • @johannap4747
    @johannap4747 4 года назад

    Love your voice and how you explain things ! make it very easy to understand !

  • @8avexp
    @8avexp 4 года назад

    Back when stereo records came out, supposedly they could not be played on mono phonographs without replacing the cartridge. By 1967, everyone was promoting the notion that stereo records could be played by any modern, lightweight tone arm without damaging the grooves. I can play stereo LPS on our 1954 vintage Magnavox Collaro phono (which to my knowledge still has its original Sonotone cartridge) with no harm. The catch is, you have to use a sapphire stylus. A diamond stylus can do some damage due to the weight of the tone arm.

  • @poppaspank
    @poppaspank Год назад

    A lot of 45 rpm singles were produced for mono so when they were played on top 40 radio they would sound good on car radios... in the days before cars had surround sound systems.
    I bought all the Beatles albums up through Revolver in mono (for $2.49 @), then Sgt. Pepper came out and though I have heard there was a mono mix, for some reason all the stores I went to only carried the Stereo version (for a dollar more...).

  • @siliguritube
    @siliguritube 4 года назад

    Well. I like your style of presentation. Simple and to the point. But one major point you have missed. The Horizontal and Vertical grooving for stereo recordings was there at very initial stage, may be for experimental purpose. But now all the commercial recordings carry only one groove nearly horizontal that carries both the channels. I am sure you know that the 2 movement recorders in recording mechanism receive signal from two separate channels. Both are kept at 90 degree angle to each other and joined at a point. The whole set up is placed in such a manner that the apex point holding a single needle remains looking straight downward. Now, the needle vibrates as per the vector of movement of the two recorders depending upon the signals they receive. So there is only one track being recorded. Now, the same happens in reverse during play back. The vector received from the single track creates two different kind of movement in two separate receiving arms inside a cartridge placed at 90 Degree angle to each other. That gives us two separate signals to play it in Stereo. And that is why any modern MONO cartridge capable of receiving Horizontal signals only can play modern Stereo records to produce it in Mono. Because it received a blend of the two. However, thanks for the video.

  • @finfowler8824
    @finfowler8824 4 года назад

    I just want to thank you for introducing this hobby to me, Without you, I would have ended up getting a Crosley! Thank you for your content.

  • @VeryUsMumblings
    @VeryUsMumblings 4 года назад +1

    I prefer stereo, but I managed to get a hold of a Beatles Album Rubber Soul in Mono and it sounds surprisingly good. I guess it was just the way it was produced. So I'm going to suggest:
    Song of the Day: Norwegian Wood from Beatles Rubber Soul album in Mono.

  • @sheddingmyvelvet
    @sheddingmyvelvet 4 года назад +5

    song of the day: mother-danzig

  • @nico3641
    @nico3641 4 года назад +1

    I saw BB King live in concert. Lucille came through loud and clear and in stereo.

    • @davidalanjonesridge9874
      @davidalanjonesridge9874 4 года назад

      And that is rare for and what with the movement of the performers dancing back and forth across that stage, so for true channel separation, the sound man would have a hard time keeping track of whom was where. Just in case a live performance may come out in stereo, I like to be seated direct center or slightly ahead of center.

  • @killer92173
    @killer92173 2 года назад +1

    Another great alternative to having a TRUE MONO signal is to buy a vintage audio receiver and have it to set to MONO instead of Stereo

    • @Fastvoice
      @Fastvoice Год назад

      That may put you in some phasing problems when a piece was mastered without a good look at the phase correlation meter. Certain parts of the sound may get cancelled.

  • @R3TR0R4V3
    @R3TR0R4V3 2 года назад

    I have quite a few mono records at this point.. All modern pressings though. I bought them because I heard they sounded the best vs what else was available at the time, ie. The Beatles - In Mono releases from 2014, etc. No dedicated mono cart yet, but I plan on it. However, I still prefer stereo because that's what I grew up with. 👍

  • @alansmith2426
    @alansmith2426 4 года назад +17

    Have to say, having sometimes heard a mono record played through both a mono and stereo system (of equal quality) I don't see any advantage in the extra expense of a mono cartridge...many of the mono records sounded exactly the same through both cartridges, in others I could pick up a very *tiny* amount of cross talk and phasing shift, but if anything it actually (to my ears) *improved* the sound. It made the narrow mono stage just a tiny bit more "open." Of course YMMV. Another point VE didn't mention - if your amplifier has a "mono" switch, you don't need a separate mono cartridge at all... just flick/push that one single control and you are good to go.

    • @kissfanmac
      @kissfanmac 4 года назад +2

      What if you just unplug one speaker?

    • @juanarriaga4929
      @juanarriaga4929 4 года назад

      KISS Fan Mac yes I wanna that too

    • @bluepeng8895
      @bluepeng8895 3 года назад

      @@kissfanmac That wouldn’t work because one speaker for example, plays vocals and guitar, and the other speaker plays drums and bass. If you just unplug one speaker, you would either only hear just the vocals and guitar, or just the drums and bass

  • @vintageandvinyl
    @vintageandvinyl 4 года назад

    I love 50’s music. A lot of records I have are mono. I have an Ortofon 2M Red and they sound fine. I have been thinking about getting a dedicated mono cartridge. I just the record Duke of Earl by Gene Chandler and it’s Mono.

  • @TheStarclipse
    @TheStarclipse 4 года назад +7

    I prefer PET SOUNDS in mono :)

    • @NewYorksMostWanted
      @NewYorksMostWanted 3 года назад

      I also started to prefer Pet Sounds in mono once I compared the stereo version of Caroline No to the mono version, makes so much of a difference.

  • @Avtoigor1
    @Avtoigor1 4 года назад +3

    A man has two ears! Mono is a limitation of technology of past years. We don't have to suffer, of course only stereo!

  • @EddieJazzFan
    @EddieJazzFan 4 года назад

    Jarrett, one important point that you omitted is that while you can use a stereo cartridge to play any record (mono or stereo), it is absolutely not advisable to play your stereo record with a mono cartridge/stylus setup. A mono stylus will damage the grooves of a stereo record!

  • @Nicholas_Chris
    @Nicholas_Chris 4 года назад +3

    Song of the day: All Those Years Ago - George Harrison

  • @rsyalom
    @rsyalom Год назад

    I think you are missing is that mono records play every instrument from both speakers. So suppose you are listening to a John Coltrane Solo in mono you are getting it from both speakers rather than primarily from just one speaker. Hence richer fuller sound. Furthermore. a magical convergence can occur when your speakers and room is set up just right …. You get the center of sound emanating from a center “phantom” speaker where both speaker output converges…with a huge rich sound stage. That is the beauty of mono.

  • @threearcstudios
    @threearcstudios 2 года назад

    So interesting! Always wanted to know the difference! Thanks so much!

  • @simonevillarosa7907
    @simonevillarosa7907 4 года назад +6

    Song of the day: Roxanne - The Police

  • @imno1157
    @imno1157 3 года назад

    I was excited to finally hear Sgt peppers in mono from the box set...Hated it, it sounded like a bag was over my head...Stereo/5.1/Atmos/Auro 3D are the my preferred choices..

  • @scottjackson1420
    @scottjackson1420 4 года назад

    Now, this is one topic that I already had a pretty good handle on.

  • @nelgstuart3442
    @nelgstuart3442 3 года назад +2

    The Beatles (and their producer, Sir George Martin) said that stereo ruined the
    quality of the sound, and that Mono was far better, however, they had no choice
    but to change with the times. I tend to agree with that.

    • @oozzyknob
      @oozzyknob 2 года назад +1

      You agree that mono sounds better? I’ve always had two speakers in my room so I don’t really know what mono sounds like. I’ve listened to a gramophone once but that’s it haha.

  • @emperorjulian2159
    @emperorjulian2159 4 года назад

    The only mono record I have is the first Procol Harum Album and the rest are my dad and grandpa stuff, technically only "leased" to me - mostly some very beautiful classical music recorded in the 60's :)

  • @pixelbeta1130
    @pixelbeta1130 4 года назад +1

    Song of the day
    I know what you like (in your wardrobe) - Genesis

  • @tonyrussell7275
    @tonyrussell7275 4 года назад +1

    Back in the day stereo equipment was in its infancy and very expensive. So the majority of the teens that the music was aimed at could only afford mono record players. That's why there were the two options available. The mono versions were usually cheaper.

    • @jimmybuckets5863
      @jimmybuckets5863 2 года назад

      That helps explain why most rock bands only really cared about the mono mix at one time

  • @saltech3444
    @saltech3444 2 года назад

    I have a mono Sgt Peppers, the original 1967 UK release. I think I see a lot of confusion online about mono versus stereo in terms of mix, like in the Beatles' albums, and how it is NOT just a question of the same information being crushed down to a single channel.

  • @rockabillycat1954
    @rockabillycat1954 4 года назад

    I collect and listen to a lot of recordings from the 50s and early 60s, primarily early rock n roll, blues, r&b, rockabilly, and country.... and a little jazz thrown in as well. I've been using an AT3600 cart on my LP120 with a homemade stereo/mono switch (it sums the stereo channels to mono). For about $20 in parts I get a pretty accurate sound, though a mono cart would be ideal sound wise, money and convenience have won out so far.

  • @amarnath.n6009
    @amarnath.n6009 4 года назад

    Songs of the day - explanation exelent

  • @denniseldridge2936
    @denniseldridge2936 4 года назад

    I haven't listened to the video yet, but a word on the early US stereo releases of Beatles albums. It seem that the reason for the bizarre separation of instruments on some songs is due to the fact that the three-track tapes were sent to the American manufacturer without explanation of the fact that they were meant to be remixed down to proper mono and stereo tracks. But instead, they simply put it out almost as it came on the tape. I don't know if this is true, but from what I've heard, it certainly does sound that way.