The final page of Gramophone always has a celeb interview, along with a recording he/she "could not live without" (which I always think is a little OTT).
But there are recordings of works that we might regard as so he and-and-shoulders above all others that we would never want to part with them.
My list would include:
Beethoven Eroica Symphony: VPO/Erich Kleiber
Elgar Symphony 1: Halle/Barbirolli 1957
Elgar Enigma Variations: Philharmonia/Barbirolli
Elgar The Apostles: Halle/Elder
Elgar The Kingdom: LPO/Boult
Mozart Symphony 40: VPO/Furtwangler
Puccini Madama Butterfly: Freni/Pavarotti/VPO/Karajan
Puccini La Boheme: Santa Cecilia, Rome/Serafin
Strauss Alpine Symphony: RPO/Kempe
Strauss 4 Last Songs: Popp/LPO/Tennstedt
Tchaikovsky Symphony 4: VPO/Maazel
Vaughan Williams Sea Symphony: LSO/Previn
Wagner Götterdämmerung: VPO/Solti
Wagner Tannhauser: VPO/Solti
But there are recordings of works that we might regard as so he and-and-shoulders above all others that we would never want to part with them.
My list would include:
Beethoven Eroica Symphony: VPO/Erich Kleiber
Elgar Symphony 1: Halle/Barbirolli 1957
Elgar Enigma Variations: Philharmonia/Barbirolli
Elgar The Apostles: Halle/Elder
Elgar The Kingdom: LPO/Boult
Mozart Symphony 40: VPO/Furtwangler
Puccini Madama Butterfly: Freni/Pavarotti/VPO/Karajan
Puccini La Boheme: Santa Cecilia, Rome/Serafin
Strauss Alpine Symphony: RPO/Kempe
Strauss 4 Last Songs: Popp/LPO/Tennstedt
Tchaikovsky Symphony 4: VPO/Maazel
Vaughan Williams Sea Symphony: LSO/Previn
Wagner Götterdämmerung: VPO/Solti
Wagner Tannhauser: VPO/Solti
Comment