I find it ironic digital mixing was done, when there were so reletively few TRACKS, and fewer performers that needed mixing here. In other words, digital's supposed mixing advantage of being able to endlesslsy/effortlessly tweak was ... what, here?
Perhaps the number of quality analog desks, and experienced mix engineers, has dried up more than even the vintage recorders that could feed them (he said, in more ways than one.) Somebody call Dave Grohl and go rent the Neve he scrounged from Sound City!
Now that I think about it I don't recall really anything about the drums. As in, non-memorable. Hmm ...
No, not much sparkle nor standout clarity, however I never got the impression Thompson's vocals weren't presented as anything less than very good. Overall this recording has a relaxed feeling I appreciated and that I think served the material appropriately.
Being cut at a lower level to help reign in sibilants isn't a cause for concern when the vinyl is this quiet, IMO. I particularly recall Salford Sunday sounding sibilantly successful. Say that 3 times fast.