It was like I was back in 1999 again.
Why did I rip a CD? How did I do it?
I actually couldn’t remember how to do it in Windows because it had been so long. I’d used iTunes to rip most of my CD collection way back and haven’t had iTunes installed for years (and currently don’t have it installed). The first step was digging out my portable LG DVD drive, since none of my PCs have had DVD drives in them going back well over a decade now. I figured Windows Media Player (née Groove) might still support ripping CDs and it does. The process was relatively straightforward, but I had to direct it to information online to correctly tag the album, artists, and songs.
This CD ripping adventure started when I installed Deezer on my Galaxy S26, which has replaced Apple Music for me (I’ll post later about how de-Appled I am now). I prefer music to be onboard the device locally rather than chew up cell data and rely on sometimes spotty connectivity when out and aboot listening to tunes. It was when I downloaded Tales of Mystery and Imagination by The Alan Parsons Project that I remembered I’d bought the (second) CD remaster some years back and this particular edition had both the original 1987 remaster in which Parsons tweaked with some of the songs and the album fairly liberally, but also included a straight remaster of the 1976 original, altering none of the music and just cleaning up the sound quality.
Because the two versions are quite different, I wanted to go back and listen to the original again to see if I might prefer it. On Deezer this was a simple download. On the PC I use a different music program, not Deezer, so I dug out my Giant Binder of Music, found the relevant CD and let ‘er rip.
I can now listen to the original version of Tales of Mystery and Imagination at home and when on the go and in some ways, it’s better, mainly because all the new guitar bits added in the 1987 remaster feel superfluous, but I have to admit, the restored Orson Welles narration and the organ used to bridge what was once the two sides of the album into a seamless whole, both work really well.
I’m glad to have both readily available now and have even contemplated re-ripping some of my CDs at a higher bitrate now that know how to do it again. But it’s a lot of CDs and my ears are terrible, so it’s probably not worth the effort.
Probably.












