MoFi UltraDisc One-Step Edition: Blood, Sweat & Tears by Blood, Sweat & Tears Review

David Price auditions a lavish limited edition audiophile boxed set of a nineteen sixties pop classic…
Mobile Fidelity Sound Labs
Blood, Sweat & Tears by Blood, Sweat & Tears
£185
The nineteen sixties was a remarkable time for popular music – and as it began to give birth to the genre of rock, it sucked in a huge array of different styles from R&B to jazz and folk. New York-based Blood, Sweat and Tears epitomised this musical diversity, fusing different genres to brew up a sound that was a fascinating portent of progressive rock, which was just around the corner.
This – the band's second album – was an unintentionally transitional one, as its charismatic co-founder Al Kooper had just quit a few months earlier. Yet surprisingly, perhaps he wasn't missed, and instead, the new line-up forged ahead with a range of catchy and well-crafted tunes that run the gamut of musical styles. From the classical-influenced opener – a variation on a theme in Eric Satie's Trois Gymnopedies – to the instantly recognisable and annoyingly catchy Spinning Wheel, the band's eponymous second album is a real class act.
Released on 11th December 1968, it was once of the most technologically advanced recordings of its time. Just over a year after The Beatles released their magnum opus Sgt. Pepper's – a four-track recording done at London's Abbey Road – Blood, Sweat & Tears was a sixteen-track affair done at CBS Studios in New York. It was produced by James William Guercio, who was also working with another new band of US jazz-rockers called Chicago at the time. It still sounds remarkably fresh even now, with sensitive arrangements for tracks like the hit single You've Made Me So Very Happy. This was significantly helped by the band's excellent musicianship and the strong vocals of singer David Clayton-Thomas.
Despite getting mixed reviews – Rolling Stone was very sniffy about it – people-power proved the critics wrong, and the album went on to become a quadruple-platinum album, going to the top of the US album charts for seven weeks, spawning three hit singles and winning a Grammy for Album of the Year. It also earned the band a headlining slot at Woodstock, too. This soft and slightly jazzy sounding record has a sophisticated and relaxing feel, something that's all the more apparent on this MoFi SuperVinyl pressing.
Limited to 6,000 numbered copies, this Mobile Fidelity UltraDisc One-Step 180g 45RPM 2LP edition is about as lavish as it's possible to get. The excellent quality of the original recording shines out, and you can almost feel that (then) state-of-the-art Ampex MM-1000 sixteen-track tape recorder whirring away. This MoFi pressing embeds vast amounts of information into the groove whilst sounding creamy-smooth. The bass power and stereo soundstaging have to be heard to be believed.
The packaging of this double-disc LP set is beyond criticism; it's so well done that you struggle to imagine how it could be bettered. Indeed, some will find it over the top – such is its obsessive attention to detail – but those special thick jackets and superlative quality inner sleeves will delight record collectors. Such is the rising stock of these MoFi releases that, despite its sky-high £185 price tag, you'll probably never be able to buy one this cheap again. Many think they're over-priced – and they're certainly over the top – but the fact that they always sell out is all you need to know.
This is a great way to hear one of the band's earliest line-ups. Trumpeters and flugelhornists Lew Soloff and Chuck Winfield lend this recording a distinctly late sixties feel reminiscent of The Box Tops and The Association. As does the great playing of drummer Bobby Colomby, organist Dick Halligan, guitarist Steve Katz, alto saxophonist Fred Lipsius and trombonist Jerry Hyman. Here they all are on this new audiophile release, sounding fresher than you could imagine. Who says that vinyl is dead?
Visit Mobile Fidelity for more information

David Price
David started his career in 1993 writing for Hi-Fi World and went on to edit the magazine for nearly a decade. He was then made Editor of Hi-Fi Choice and continued to freelance for it and Hi-Fi News until becoming StereoNET’s Editor-in-Chief.
Posted in: Music
JOIN IN THE DISCUSSION
Want to share your opinion or get advice from other enthusiasts? Then head into the Message
Forums where thousands of other enthusiasts are communicating on a daily basis.
CLICK HERE FOR FREE MEMBERSHIP
Trending
applause awards
Each time StereoNET reviews a product, it is considered for an Applause Award. Winning one marks it out as a design of great quality and distinction – a special product in its class, on the grounds of either performance, value for money, or usually both.
Applause Awards are personally issued by StereoNET’s global Editor-in-Chief, David Price – who has over three decades of experience reviewing hi-fi products at the highest level – after consulting with our senior editorial team. They are not automatically given with all reviews, nor can manufacturers purchase them.
The StereoNET editorial team includes some of the world’s most experienced and respected hi-fi journalists with a vast wealth of knowledge. Some have edited popular English language hi-fi magazines, and others have been senior contributors to famous audio journals stretching back to the late 1970s. And we also employ professional IT and home theatre specialists who work at the cutting edge of today’s technology.
We believe that no other online hi-fi and home cinema resource offers such expert knowledge, so when StereoNET gives an Applause Award, it is a trustworthy hallmark of quality. Receiving such an award is the prerequisite to becoming eligible for our annual Product of the Year awards, awarded only to the finest designs in their respective categories. Buyers of hi-fi, home cinema, and headphones can be sure that a StereoNET Applause Award winner is worthy of your most serious attention.