
Originally Posted by
Philles/Motown Gary
Waiting, in addition to my previous post, it's a good thing that only Mono Motown albums were available to me before 1968 when Stereo became the norm. When I heard the Stereo mixes in later years, I was shocked to hear how some of my favorite moments in Motown tracks were ruined in Stereo:
1) The handclaps in the Mono version of Marvin Gaye & Kim Weston's "What Good Am I Without You" were completely stripped in the Stereo version.
2) The beautiful string passages in the Mono version of Marvin Gaye's "Little Darling [[I Need You)" were totally and unceremoniously stripped in the Stereo version. As someone recently mentioned, listening to its remains is nearly unbearable.
3) The Mono LP version of The Marvelettes" "The Hunter Gets Captured By The Game" contains an additional verse immediately after the Instrumental break in which Wanda sings, "Every day things change, and some old ideas give way to some new. Some new ideas are strange like the new idea of me being caught by you." For some strange reason known only to Motown, that additional verse was deleted for the Stereo version.
4) As everyone surely knows by now, the Mono version of Martha & The Vandellas' "Watchout" LP boasted the hit single, dotted-eights shuffle-beat version of "Jimmy Mack", whereas the Stereo version of "Watchout" contained an entirely different, earlier recording of "Jimmy Mack" which was much slower and lackluster by comparison.
5) Mary Wells' "Vintage Stock" LP in Mono contained an exciting version of "Honey Boy" -- complete with echoed handclaps, whereas the Stereo version eliminated them.
6) The Mono version of Martha & The Vandellas' "Quicksand" contained a drum break that's HOT and echo-laden; that same drum break in Stereo sounds weak and disappointing.
7) Finally, the Stereo version of Martha & The Vandellas "Heat Wave" and "I'm Ready For Love" add an extra line or two to the Instrumental breaks which I, personally, find annoying. If other fans like it, that's perfectly fine. It just kind of rubs me the wrong way, which is why alternate versions of Motown recordings oftentimes annoy me for the same reasons. Hearing my favorite singers change the phrasing from that which I've known and loved for 60 years is somewhat unsettling.
There are even more differences between Motown's Mono and Stereo versions. At the moment, those listed above are all that come to mind.
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