Music Review: Phil Collins - Hello, I Must Be Going [Audio Fidelity 24K+ Gold]

There are at least three good reasons for classic rock lovers to take a hard look at Audio Fidelity's latest release in its 24K+Gold Compact Disc series, Phil Collins' Hello, I Must Be Going. First of all, there is the music. Second, there is the sound quality. Third, even if you think all Collins' music sounds the same, the discs in this Audio Fidelity numbered and limited series are collectibles waiting to happen.

First things first, the album's ten tracks are samples of Collins at his dramatic, albeit resentful best. If you like what Collins does--and while it may not be hip to admit it, I have to say I do--how can you not want a pristine version of the ultimate bitter kiss off anthem "I Don't Care Anymore?" The album is filled with a lot of the same kind of venom nurtured art: "I Cannot Believe It's True," "Do You Know, Do You Care?" and "It Don't Matter to Me." There is no muse like a woman, even one you are divorcing. You have to wonder who it is the singer is listening to in "Thru These Walls." How the upbeat cover of the Supreme's "You Can't Hurry Love" managed to make its way onto the album is open to question, but it does at the least offer something of an antidote to the overall sweet bitterness.

The sound quality on these Audio Fidelity discs is exceptional. As their website describes it, their process replaces the "irregular plated surfaces of standard aluminum discs" with a perfected layer of 24K gold free from "any type of physical defect." Mastered in this case by noted audiophile music restoration specialist Steve Hoffman, the CD aims for what he calls a "lifelike" sound. In answer to a question on his website, Hoffman says

I want that "breath of life." That’s what I want. If it sounds like a fake approximation of nothing that’s alive—that is not it for me. I want it to sound like, (and it doesn’t matter if it is Buddy Holly or Blood, Sweat and Tears or The Doors) I want it to sound like they could be standing in the same room where you are listening.

While there are those who argue there are superior re-mastering processes, the sound on the Audio Fidelity discs is impressive enough for me.

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  • 1 - Kit O'Toole

    Nov 03, 2011 at 3:43 pm

    I have this, and while I wish the bass had come through a bit more, it's still a pristine remastering job. And you touch on a good point--this is definitely one of Collins' darkest albums. As I said in my review, anyone expecting "Sussudio" may be in for a shock. :)

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