I was in college when the Compact Disc first hit the common marketplace. But of course, like personal computers back then, they were prohibitively expensive for us student paupers. One could only look at the "long boxes" and dream of a scratch free / tick free experience. Oh the irony of today when everyone wants those sounds. Just like many want their beer to be hazy, after centuries of learning how to better purify the beverage. We're a world gone mad.
Really without any other choice, I stayed with the vinyl album because it's all I could afford (even then I disliked cassettes - another medium back in vogue. Going crazy I tell ya...). So in 1984, all of 19 and really dirt poor, I dutifully purchased my dogeared used and scratched USA Virgin press of Hergest Ridge for a $1 at a local store. So yea, not only used records, but not necessarily great copies either. Hey the nicer ones were $4! I couldn't afford that. And so I'd take the vinyl home, plop it on my roommate's crappy stereo with a crappy stylus and played it endlessly. Happier than a clam.
Two years later I scored a summer internship at a major defense contractor. I was making gobs of cash (not really, but it seemed so at the time). So I did what any other 21 year old newly minted "hundredaire" would do: I bought me a nice stereo! With a CD player - wow I'm rich! And the first two CDs I purchased were Pink Floyd's Meddle and Tangerine Dream's Green Desert. Stories for another day. But damn, new CD's were expensive back then. But then there was the burgeoning used CD market (not cheap either but better)...
I bring this story to the Hergest Ridge review because this was the first used CD I ever bought to replace a beat LP, starting a trend that continued for years. And to no regret whatsoever. As mentioned above, it wasn't like we had 180 gram pristine vinyl copies like today. Oh hell no - we just had scratched up old used copies of commodities that probably found themselves in a trash can years later. And back then even the new albums were cheap 80s represses - again of the commodity variety. Any expensive import I would have kept on LP. And to my ears, did this CD ever sound SO MUCH better than my old vinyl!
As for the music, Hergest Ridge remains my favorite Oldfield effort (though Amarok - the album from out of nowhere - gives it a run). He managed to capture the English countryside sound similar to Anthony Phillips - but on a large scale with many marquee name participants. And Side 2 gets really intense about halfway through - Oldfield's inner anger comes out with pounding/continual synthesizers and raucous guitar rave-ups. If you think of Oldfield as some tranquil music for middle aged New Age fans, play this side of music and you'll have a different viewpoint. Excellent on the whole.
Ownership: CD: 1984 Virgin (UK). Yes, it's the exact same CD as above. No bar codes. Cheap booklet that goes on to explain what a Compact Disc even is - in English, French, and German.
Steven Wilson could remix the album in my basement, and I'd still keep this version. Sure I'll buy his box set (hint), but I'll always treasure this CD.
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