Pink Floyd Meddle 1971 1988 Eac Flacoa 2021 May 2026
Album: Meddle Artist: Pink Floyd Release Year: 1971 (original release), 1988 (possible reissue), EAC (Exact Audio Copy) ripped in 2021, and FLAC (Free Lossless Audio Codec) encoded in 2021.
The album serves as the bridge between the experimental "Middle Period" (Atom Heart Mother) and the focused concept albums of the 1970s. The 1988 Digital Transfer: A Gold Standard pink floyd meddle 1971 1988 eac flacoa 2021
- No Noise Reduction: Unlike the 1987 US version, the 1988 UK/Europe master does not use digital noise reduction (DNR). The tape hiss is present, but so are the micro-dynamics. The decay of Richard Wright’s piano chords in "Echoes" feels natural, not gated.
- Flat Transfer: Engineers minimized EQ shaping. What you hear is essentially the master tape (albeit 17 years later) with no added treble boost.
- Dynamic Range: The 1988 CD measures a DR (Dynamic Range) value of approximately 13-14, whereas the 2011 "Why Pink Floyd?" remaster struggles at DR8. That is a monumental difference.
Musical Composition and Themes
Key Tracks: "One of These Days," "A Pillow of Winds," "Fearless," "San Tropez," "Seamus," and "Echoes". Album: Meddle Artist: Pink Floyd Release Year: 1971
Chasing the Echoes: Why Pink Floyd’s Meddle (1971) Still Demands a Perfect Ripe
For decades, Pink Floyd’s Meddle lived in the shadow of its gargantuan successors, The Dark Side of the Moon and Wish You Were Here. Yet, to the devoted listener, Meddle is the true turning point—the messy, beautiful chrysalis where psychedelic wanderlust hardened into progressive rock precision. No Noise Reduction: Unlike the 1987 US version,