Hi Vince: When I first started buying CDs in 1985---and I remember that my first purchase was Bernstein's 1984 recording of
West Side Story with Carreras and Te Kanawa---I was actually quite disappointed by what I felt was a cold "clinical" sound. Two years later, when the first Lanza CDs were
finally issued (
The Legendary Tenor and
Christmas Hymns and Carols), I didn't find the sound quality appreciably better than on any LPs. And the next couple of releases (
The Student Prince and The Desert Song and
The Great Caruso/Caruso Favorites) were even less impressive soundwise! In fact,
The Student Prince on CD, with its thin-sounding irritating fake stereo effect, wasn't a patch on my glorious mono LP.
Ironically, the first Lanza CD to make me sit up and take notice was the budget Camden release of You Do Something to Me in 1989. Although not perfect---some annoying "flutter" mars the climactic moment on "Che gelida manina" and continues into "O tu che in seno agli angeli"---it contained the best reproduction I'd ever heard of the "Song of India," and "Some Day" and "Beloved" sounded great too. It was then that I fully appreciated how crucial the role of the remastering engineer was in determining optimum sound quality.
Things got better and more consistent for Lanza releases in the second half of the 1990s, with excellent sound on the Albert Hall reissue (Live from London), When Day Is Done and You'll Never Walk Alone, but there were major disappointments along the way---especially the Mario! Lanza At His Best CD in 1995.
But it's funny how people get used to the digital sound. I remember disagreeing with Lindsay Perigo about the remastering on the terribly uneven all-Coke Don't Forget Me CD, which came out in 1993. To my ears, the sound on this disc was hopelessly bright, stripping away all of Mario's resonance (to the point where even Amazon's own paid reviewer claimed on the product page that Lanza lacked a decent middle register!), but to Linz it was the perfect reproduction of "a fantasy voice."
We certainly all hear things differently....
Cheers,
Derek
P.S. I think you're right about the masters of some Lanza recordings having deteriorated. Off the top of my head, there are now annoying dropouts on two classic Lanza recordings---the 1949 "Che gelida manina" and the 1950 "E lucevan le stelle"---that were never present on any vinyl reproductions.