2019 Full Concert Updated — Pink Floyd Pulse Remastered
For the gear heads: The 2019 remaster allows you to finally see David Gilmour’s hands clearly. When he plays the second solo in "Comfortably Numb," the camera cuts are slower, allowing you to watch his vibrato technique on the black Stratocaster (serial #0001). The remaster does not add artificial sharpness; it simply removes the compression artifacts of the 90s. You can see the sweat on his brow and the tears in the eyes of the crowd during "The Great Gig in the Sky."
One of the most immediate improvements in the 2019 mix is the bass response. Guy Pratt’s bass lines on tracks like "Sorrow" and "One of These Days" now possess a guttural weight that was slightly flattened in the original '95 release. The remaster offers a wider soundstage, separating the instruments so that the listener can hear the subtle interplay between Wright’s Hammond organ and Gilmour’s Stratocaster without them fighting for frequency space. pink floyd pulse remastered 2019 full concert
To maximize your experience of the 2019 remaster, do not just stream it on a laptop. Follow this protocol: For the gear heads: The 2019 remaster allows
Upon release (October 2019), reviews praised the remaster for avoiding over-processing. Rolling Stone noted: “It looks and sounds like a film shot yesterday, not 25 years ago.” Some purists criticized the upscaling from 35mm to 4K as not “true” 4K (due to optical limitations of the original lenses), but most conceded the improvement over the DVD was dramatic. You can see the sweat on his brow
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