Nirvana - Incesticide -1992- -pbthal Lp 24-96- ... -

Vinyl Rips / Audiophile

Dave Grohl’s drumming finally has weight. On "Aneurysm," the kick drum doesn’t just click—it thuds. The bass guitar, often buried, walks audibly through "Lounge Act" (yes, the Incesticide version of "Lounge Act" is a different mix). Nirvana - Incesticide -1992- -PBTHAL LP 24-96- ...

The original CD made cymbals sound like frying bacon. PBTHAL’s rip lets the shimmer and decay of Grohl’s crash cymbals breathe. On "Been a Son" (the BBC session), the room ambience becomes part of the performance. Vinyl Rips / Audiophile Dave Grohl’s drumming finally

Essential (for Nirvana fans / audiophiles) Source: PBTHAL LP rip @ 24-bit/96kHz Compare to: 1992 original CD, 2016 remaster Have you heard the PBTHAL rip of Incesticide ? Or do you have another favorite vinyl transfer? Let me know in the comments. Note for posting: If you’re sharing this on a forum or blog that prohibits direct links to copyrighted material, simply remove the download reference and focus on the sonic analysis. PBTHAL’s work is widely discussed in audiophile circles as a reference standard , not a piracy endorsement. The original CD made cymbals sound like frying bacon

Here’s what stands out:

April 17, 2026

But for decades, Incesticide sounded… thin. The original CD was bright and harsh. The vinyl was better, but still a product of its era: compressed, aggressive, and fatiguing on good headphones. This is where the magic happens. PBTHAL’s rip captures the physicality of the vinyl without the surface noise (or with very, very little). At 24-bit/96kHz, you’re getting far more dynamic range than a CD or standard streaming.

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