Originally posted by Pianorak
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Ace of Clubs/Eclipse/World of ... etc
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Originally posted by Eine Alpensinfonie View PostMost Decca Eclipse LPs were original mono recordings, but they were issued in electronic stereo versions as well, which was frowned upon by some, though I have to admit that some of these were done very well.[FONT=Comic Sans MS][I][B]Numquam Satis![/B][/I][/FONT]
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My introduction to gramophone records was the handful of 78s that my mother had brought from East Bengal when moving to London just before the Coronation of E II. Easily my favourite was Toscanini conducting his NBC SO in Rossini's overture to The Thieving Magpie. The nipper label was a darker hue of reddish-purple than the others, somehow making it feel special. Once that side drum began to roll, I was hooked, my ear drawn close to the small oval loudspeaker of the simple Collaro record player, with stylus flipped to '78'.
So my first LP was an eighth birthday present from my parents of the Ace of Clubs recording of Rossini Overtures by the Concertgebouw Orchestra / van Beinum:
It wasn't long before William Tell, memorably used in 'The Lone Ranger' television series, of course, took over as my most played track.
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Originally posted by Keraulophone View Post.
My introduction to gramophone records was the handful of 78s that my mother had brought from East Bengal when moving to London just before the Coronation of E II. Easily my favourite was Toscanini conducting his NBC SO in Rossini's overture to The Thieving Magpie. The nipper label was a darker hue of reddish-purple than the others, somehow making it feel special. Once that side drum began to roll, I was hooked, my ear drawn close to the small oval loudspeaker of the simple Collaro record player, with stylus flipped to '78'.
So my first LP was an eighth birthday present from my parents of the Ace of Clubs recording of Rossini Overtures by the Concertgebouw Orchestra / van Beinum:
It wasn't long before William Tell, memorably used in 'The Lone Ranger' television series, of course, took over as my most played track.
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Another was the Sargent/LSO 'Planets'. Years later I was able to talk to the late John Burden about that one on which he was 1st horn. I said how lovely his playing at the start of Venus was.
He responded that Sargent insisted that he played it handstopped about which he was appalled but he did as he was told (he did not always do that - there is a story - unfit for a family group - about John Burden's reaction to a certain child conductor!). When the disc was released it sounded just as it should; the engineers had included that passage from a balance test rather than a take.
John Burden was one of the greats (he led the horns on the film score for 633 Squadron for the original soundtrack).
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Originally posted by Keraulophone View Post.
My introduction to gramophone records was the handful of 78s that my mother had brought from East Bengal when moving to London just before the Coronation of E II. Easily my favourite was Toscanini conducting his NBC SO in Rossini's overture to The Thieving Magpie. The nipper label was a darker hue of reddish-purple than the others, somehow making it feel special. Once that side drum began to roll, I was hooked, my ear drawn close to the small oval loudspeaker of the simple Collaro record player, with stylus flipped to '78'.
So my first LP was an eighth birthday present from my parents of the Ace of Clubs recording of Rossini Overtures by the Concertgebouw Orchestra / van Beinum:
It wasn't long before William Tell, memorably used in 'The Lone Ranger' television series, of course, took over as my most played track.
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Answer:
Full list for anoraks here.Last edited by gurnemanz; 24-12-19, 13:14.
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I do remember a reviewer talking about "Ace of Clubs fizz" in reference to the sound quality on some of these discs. Many were produced by Jimmy Walker who was part of John Culshaw's team for the Solti Ring recording. I worked for Jimmy at D'Oyly Carte in the early 70s; a man of many talents but could be intimidating (he had it in for one of the violinists and would sometimes lean over her cupping a hand to his ear).
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