2021-09-03, 08:26 AM
Yes, the GBU is one ugly remix/redo! I didn't go into the Leone films because they are a mountain huge can of worms.
I'm wondering if like High Plains Drifter, the Hang 'em High Kino stereo track is not another case of the stems being stereo.
If they had access to the stems, and music & effects track are stereo, then doing a simple 2 tracks remix (vocals + M&E) will produce results close to the original, only in stereo. Trying to collapse this to mono, could however results in out of phase moments as the tape would be very old, and it's probably hard to align 100% of the dual channels of the M&E at this stage in time. Even a slight warp on the tape or small head misalignment would result in out of phase moments (like the ones during the store shoot out in The Enforcer remix, or the cafe shoot out in Sudden Impact in the remix).
Something that wouldn't be a problem back in the days as the tapes were pristine and they had analog consoles and pristine players with clean heads to fix any phasing moment on the spot.
So my guess about the absence of the lossless mono tracks on some Kino when they have stereo tracks is that the reason is technical, and they don't bother going back to the LDs to get the tracks because it's another full two days of work to rip lossless and resync.
At this point in time, LDs might thus be the best archival preservations of many mono tracks.
Once you have separate stereo elements, doing a 5.1 is then easy as the front work is already done: you have the vocals on center, and the stereo M&E where everything is already left right and phantom center. It's then just case of creating some rear echo, and adding some action moments in the lfe. Presto you have an impressive 5.1 track in the complete spirit of the original mix.
I'm wondering if like High Plains Drifter, the Hang 'em High Kino stereo track is not another case of the stems being stereo.
If they had access to the stems, and music & effects track are stereo, then doing a simple 2 tracks remix (vocals + M&E) will produce results close to the original, only in stereo. Trying to collapse this to mono, could however results in out of phase moments as the tape would be very old, and it's probably hard to align 100% of the dual channels of the M&E at this stage in time. Even a slight warp on the tape or small head misalignment would result in out of phase moments (like the ones during the store shoot out in The Enforcer remix, or the cafe shoot out in Sudden Impact in the remix).
Something that wouldn't be a problem back in the days as the tapes were pristine and they had analog consoles and pristine players with clean heads to fix any phasing moment on the spot.
So my guess about the absence of the lossless mono tracks on some Kino when they have stereo tracks is that the reason is technical, and they don't bother going back to the LDs to get the tracks because it's another full two days of work to rip lossless and resync.
At this point in time, LDs might thus be the best archival preservations of many mono tracks.
Once you have separate stereo elements, doing a 5.1 is then easy as the front work is already done: you have the vocals on center, and the stereo M&E where everything is already left right and phantom center. It's then just case of creating some rear echo, and adding some action moments in the lfe. Presto you have an impressive 5.1 track in the complete spirit of the original mix.