Surround Sound Music Albums

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  1. 5.1 Surround Sound Music

Albums mixed in 5.1 surround sound (that’s five speakers plus a subwoofer) have always been hard to come by in the metal scene. The 5.1 album has been a niche product in general because of the format’s higher price and limited playability (it’ll only play on your DVD player, but you’ll still have to buy the CD version for anywhere else). And that’s not to mention the geeks-only factor of being an audiophile format in a compressed-mp3-is-good-enough age.

I have been a big fan of surround sound music for quite a number of years and have built up a bit of collection of 5.1 Surround Sound albums. R.E.M - New Adventures in HiFi.

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5.1 Surround Sound Music

Surround Sound Music AlbumsSurround sound songs

With its low sales and high production costs, the format has been mostly relegated to mainstream, classic releases like the Beach Boys and Phil Collins – most metal bands just don’t have the budget to mix an album twice. Still, there are metal artists with the technical chops, high production and careful attention to their craft that deserve the high quality 5.1 treatment. We present to you some absolute must-own 5.1 surround sound metal albums. Porcupine Tree, / / / With vocalist/mastermind Steven Wilson’s dedication to the format, Porcupine Tree gets first mention on this list. Nearly every P-Tree release to date, including this fall’s The Incident, has received the 5.1 treatment (and not just as a hastily put-together throw-in for deluxe/limited editions). Wilson takes full advantage of every channel on his surround sound editions, but tastefully keeps the mixes from overusing each channel and becoming too schizophrenic. The most recent album, Fear Of A Blank Planet, is one of the band’s most ambitious and spacey records, lending itself perfectly to the format.

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