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I've just received dual-layer checkdiscs of Losey's Don Giovanni, and while I'm saving the full experience for when I can play them on a system that can handle DTS 96/24, I can already confirm that it looks like a blinding transfer - anamorphic, framed at the correct 1.66:1 aspect ratio, and seemingly blemish-free.
I was a little concerned about the fact that it was a PAL transfer, as this opera is rather famous for being in D minor, and the old VHS effectively retuned it up a semitone, to the disgust of a Gramophone critic, who blamed the conductor (full marks for spotting the problem, but clearly he knew nothing of PAL speedup issues!).
However, I'm delighted to confirm that the two new soundtracks - one that replicates the original Dolby Surround configuration, and the new DTS mix - have been pitch-shifted so that the film remains in the correct key. And I can be 100% certain of this, because they haven't pitch-shifted the third track (featuring the original 1979 Dolby mix), as will become obvious if you try switching soundtracks on the fly!
Purists shouldn't be alarmed, though - the 40-minute documentary on the soundtrack includes some vitriolic letters from Losey about how much he hated the original Dolby Stereo mix, and it seems that the new version is far closer to what he wanted, but couldn't achieve with the technology of the time.
UPDATE: I watched the soundtrack documentary in full last night, and it raises several questions about authenticity and authorship.
What is beyond doubt (the documentary includes several copies of signed letters of complaint) is that Losey and the singers hated the original mix. Quite apart from some specific technical problems to do with the recording technique used to capture the recitatives (which Losey shot live) turning out to be incompatible with the Dolby Stereo process, there was a constant battle between Losey and his partners at CBS over how best to mix the soundtrack. These issues were never satisfactorily resolved, and the original 1979 release version is consequently badly flawed.
So when the DVD was assembled, Jean-Louis Ducarmé, a trained musician who had worked on the original sound mix with Losey, managed to track down the original sixteen-track master recording as well as the other mastering materials (not without considerable difficulty: the first part of the documentary is something of a detective story), and used that as the basis of two new mixes - one of which replicated the speaker arrangement of the original Dolby Stereo but which was able to iron out the original technical problems (modern digital recordings can have separate soundtracks, so the phasing issues that bedevilled the original were no longer an issue), the other being a six-channel DTS mix at 96 kHz and 24 bits.
Assuming you have the necessary equipment, the latter is so spectacular that switching to it from one of the other tracks on the fly is like removing earplugs: the level of detail is just phenomenal (the film had to be split across two discs to accommodate the sound, but the break is between acts, so hardly a chore). The improvements between the old and new Dolby Surround mix are subtler, as one would hope (aside from the old mix not being pitch-corrected, so switching tracks effectively retunes the opera to E flat minor), but there's ample evidence that Ducarmé was acting in Losey's best interests.
We'll never know for certain, of course - but as the disc has the original soundtrack too, people can make up their own minds.
Last edited by MichaelB on Fri Feb 08, 2008 8:02 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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