
I wasn't suggesting 'NR' was applied all over the place; just selectively. What's more, the hiss levels could have been adjusted during mastering without NR; nothing a little reduction in the higher frequencies won't accomplish, and going by previous reference vinyl and CD, one must conclude some kind of attempt to reduce the hiss was done.. My point is, referencing the vinyl, and then later CD reissues featuring the later Animals material(which is where the hiss reduction seems to matter, understandably), sure seems apparent, as previous Polygram masterings have more, and I doubt very much 'better' sources were found beyond what Drake mastered way back when.
As for what's so special about Dennis Drake, I suppose next up is, 'What's so special about Steve Hoffman'? Oh, I'd say consistency and excellence in mastering approach..the end results, over time, have proven both to be examplary at what they do; remarkably so, in fact. And from the quality of their work, I would also say a lot of tape research went into the final product, and Bill Inglot, among others, is equally fastidious.
And while I agree that we would, ourselves, have to hear the master tapes of the music in question to be sure we're getting the most accurate sound, one need only sample the work of either man to know what we get is very rarely tinkered with, that there's no reason to suspect they play any Eq tricks to artificially make things sound 'clearer,' when all it is is accenting certain frequency bands, or knocking down the highs a little to fool someone into thinking something is 'clean' rather than what it really is: 'filtered.'
That said, the Animals' comp is still very good; but of course, if you don't have all the points of reference, making claims that no NR was used is kinda tough. The mistake reviewers tend to make--beyond making the assumption that 'remastering' means 'improved sound'--is not having enough references to make any kind of 'sound judgment.' The attitude often is, 'sounds great to me,' but like any sound system you can assemble, it sounds great until you hear something better. Then it doesn't sound so great anymore.
ED
