My wife is from Chobham, Surrey and her mum still lives there. Horsell Common is just around the corner and so this album has a particular poignancy to us, especially as we've regaled our children with the story and played the album full whack in the car as we've driven around some of these locations in the story. Trips to Woking and visits to the Fighting Machine and Capsule sculptures have their imaginations running wild and I have to admit, mine too
Anyway, when this re-release was announced, I couldn't wait to get it, especially for this 5.1 SACD mix. I'd read a lot about it and how Gary Langan (of Art of Noise/ZTT fame) and Gaƫtan Schurrer restored and remixed the whole thing.
There's a really good article in Sound on Sound about the whole process. I saw that there was a Collectors Edition and as the release coincided roughly with my birthday, I decided that my birthday cash would be spent on that. I ventured into Woking town centre, thinking that if anywhere in the country, nay the world, would have the full on Collectors Edition, it would be Woking, a town steeped in WOTW & H.G. Wells lore and history. So imagine my dismay when both Virgin and HMV said they had no stock and could only order it in. Well, as I don't live there, I refused to order it and so picked up the 2 disc SACD version to tide me over. In a way though, it was probably just as well because, some considerable time later, I found a brand new, sealed copy of the collectors edition on eBay for almost half the RRP!
As others have said, this really is a superb example of brilliant and considered multi-channel mixing. It adds to the whole experience, an experience that started so many years before on stereo vinyl. A lot of time and thought has gone into this.
The Collectors edition is a splendid piece, with all the other discs (4 bonus CD's and a DVD documentary) housed in a 12"x12" hardback book with some amazing words and pictures.
Not long ago, they released "The New Generation" version with more contemporary artists and actors and I still can't bring myself to accept it. I appreciate that Jeff Wayne might have wanted to try new things or contemporise it for a younger audience, but my two young kids, who are both under 10, and even my eldest who is in his twenties, love the original, not for who the performers are, but for the incredible story and brilliant storytelling. Now, had they released TNG as a 5.1 SACD, I would almost definitely give it a try, but alas, this wasn't to be.
The original is, in my humble opinion, beyond betterment. It is so ingrained in our culture as to transcend many other similar works. And in 5.1 SACD, it has never sounded so good.