I'm not sure why this came into my mind the other day, but I recalled that around about 1979 I joined a group called the Classical Collectors' Society - they sent out a monthly magazine with a selection of LPs at slightly discounted prices, and occasionally sent one of those floppy 7'' discs with a few choice tracks from the selection. I think I must have been with them for about 5 years and picked up a few LPs from them along the way. I seem to remember that most of the discs were EMI/HMV and a few smaller labels like CRD. Anyone else on here subscribe?
That led me in turn to think about the Classics Club from the late 50s - my father joined that and we had a few discs from them - 7'' Eine Kleine Nachtmusik (conductor William Stellar?), 10" Brahms 2, Beethoven 6, Beethoven Appassionata and Moonlight Sonatas (Hans Kann), and La boutique fantasque with Rene Leibowitz conducting. Some of these were in blank sleeves of a distinctive shade of pink and one wrote the contents of the LP on them. Anyone have any memories of that? Some of the orchestras were pseudonymous as often happened with smaller and perhaps dodgier labels - Summit issued piano recordings of Sergio Fiorentino under the name Stepan Zawisza (including a rather good Chopin recital), and Society - mostly films and shows - issued a very odd highlights from The Pirates of Penzance with a cast including (allegedly) Martyn Green, but it has been suggested that the Major-General sounded more like Vincent Price! There must have been other labels like that.
That led me in turn to think about the Classics Club from the late 50s - my father joined that and we had a few discs from them - 7'' Eine Kleine Nachtmusik (conductor William Stellar?), 10" Brahms 2, Beethoven 6, Beethoven Appassionata and Moonlight Sonatas (Hans Kann), and La boutique fantasque with Rene Leibowitz conducting. Some of these were in blank sleeves of a distinctive shade of pink and one wrote the contents of the LP on them. Anyone have any memories of that? Some of the orchestras were pseudonymous as often happened with smaller and perhaps dodgier labels - Summit issued piano recordings of Sergio Fiorentino under the name Stepan Zawisza (including a rather good Chopin recital), and Society - mostly films and shows - issued a very odd highlights from The Pirates of Penzance with a cast including (allegedly) Martyn Green, but it has been suggested that the Major-General sounded more like Vincent Price! There must have been other labels like that.
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