Solti's 1966 Decca LP recording of Mahler's second, with the LSO. It was the first, proper, full price grown up recording I bought and promptly wrecked it on my parents' Dansette gramophone which was completely unable to track it. I still have a replacement copy on the shelf and it still sounds stunning.
There are some remarkable bargains to be had at present, as the record companies put out their classic recordings one last time at bargain basement prices, before the world moves to downloads and no-one wants to buy CDs any more. I have splashed out on a 72 disc set of Toscanini's complete RCA recordings. To single out just one, Moussorgsky's Pictures at an Exhibition is wonderful. Mono, admittedly but very vivid. I didnt hear the original - I was four years old when it first came out - but sixty years on it still makes you sit up.
And if that isnt enough to be getting on with, I've also bought the complete remastered studio recordings of Maria Callas: forty items, some of them more than one CD. Callas singing Norma in 1960 still sounds wonderful, the last fifteen minutes of that performance, in which Norma murders her children, sets fire to the temple, summons the Furies and rides off with them to Hell, is enough to have the unprepared cowering behind the sofa.
Both those sets work out at about two quid a disc, which given a full price CD can be twenty five quid, is pretty amazing value.
There are some remarkable bargains to be had at present, as the record companies put out their classic recordings one last time at bargain basement prices, before the world moves to downloads and no-one wants to buy CDs any more. I have splashed out on a 72 disc set of Toscanini's complete RCA recordings. To single out just one, Moussorgsky's Pictures at an Exhibition is wonderful. Mono, admittedly but very vivid. I didnt hear the original - I was four years old when it first came out - but sixty years on it still makes you sit up.
And if that isnt enough to be getting on with, I've also bought the complete remastered studio recordings of Maria Callas: forty items, some of them more than one CD. Callas singing Norma in 1960 still sounds wonderful, the last fifteen minutes of that performance, in which Norma murders her children, sets fire to the temple, summons the Furies and rides off with them to Hell, is enough to have the unprepared cowering behind the sofa.
Both those sets work out at about two quid a disc, which given a full price CD can be twenty five quid, is pretty amazing value.
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