Take Me Back – 2024 Stereo Mixes

Andy Stewart Mono EMI Recordings

During Andy Stewart’s time recording with EMI in the 1960s, his recordings were issued on record in monophonic sound (one channel) or mixed into stereophonic sound (two channels: left and right) and often issued simultaneously in both formats.

However, in Andy’s back-catalogue a total of 22 tracks never received a true stereo mix – being issued in mono alone – and have remained like this for the past 60 years. The original two-track or four-track session tapes are unlikely to have survived, meaning that the finalised “master recordings” have vocals and instrumentation imprinted in a single mono channel making a retrospective stereo mix impossible… until now!

As a by-product of the advances in computer technologies of Artificial Intelligence (AI) and machine-learning, a new technique has emerged whereby a fully mixed musical track can now be “de-mixed” and split into its individual instrumental and vocal elements. This known as ‘stem separation’.

A typical track could contain drums, guitar, bass, keyboards, vocals, orchestration and more all blended into a single recording. Stem separation extracts each of these elements into distinct audio tracks.

In the past, remixing could only have been done with access to original multi-track session tapes, but AI software can now isolate stems with increasing accuracy allowing a whole new world of remixing opportunities.

So for the first time ever, please enjoy these stereo mixes of 22 Stewart classics only ever previously available in mono.

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